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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the Royal Sappers and Miners,
-Volume 1 (of 2), by T. W. J. Connolly
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: History of the Royal Sappers and Miners, Volume 1 (of 2)
- From the Formation of the Corps in March 1712 to the date
- when its designation was changed to that of Royal Engineers
-
-Author: T. W. J. Connolly
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2017 [EBook #55776]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE ROYAL SAPPERS, VOL 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Brian Coe and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. Superscripted
-characters are preceded by ‘^’.
-
-Footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are
-referenced. The numbering of footnotes began again at ‘1’ for each
-chapter. In this version, footnotes have been re-sequenced across the
-text for uniqueness of reference. There are several instances of
-footnotes appearing as glosses on other footnotes, identified in all
-instances as ‘a’. These have been numbered ‘Na’, where ‘N’ is the number
-of the note.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
-the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SOLDIER ARTIFICER COMPANY Plate I.
- UNIFORM 1786 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
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-
-
-
- FROM THE FORMATION OF THE CORPS IN MARCH 1772, TO THE DATE
- WHEN ITS DESIGNATION WAS CHANGED TO THAT OF
- ROYAL ENGINEERS,
- IN OCTOBER 1856.
-
- BY
-
- T. W. J. CONNOLLY,
- QUARTERMASTER OF THE ROYAL ENGINEERS.
-
- “Of most disastrous chances,
- Of moving accidents, by flood and field;
- Of hair-breadth scapes i' the imminent deadly breach.”—_Shakspeare._
-
- “There is a corps which is often about him, unseen and unsuspected, and
- which is labouring
- as hard for him in peace as others do in war.”—_The Times._
-
- =With Seventeen Coloured Illustrations.=
-
- _SECOND EDITION, WITH CONSIDERABLE ADDITIONS._
-
- IN TWO VOLUMES.—VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, LONGMANS, AND ROBERTS.
- 1857.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON: PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING
- CROSS.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
-
- ------------------
-
-
-The First Edition of the Work has long been out of print, and the Second
-would have been published earlier, only that an expected change in the
-designation of the corps delayed its appearance. That change having
-occurred, the volumes are republished, recording the services of the
-corps to the date it continued to bear its old title.
-
-Revised in many places, with verbal inaccuracies corrected, aided
-moreover by journals and official memoranda placed at my disposal to
-modify or enlarge certain incidents and services, the work is as
-complete as it would seem to be possible at present to produce it.
-
-The concluding Chapters record the services of the corps in the Aland
-Islands, in Turkey, Bulgaria, Circassia, Wallachia, and the Crimea. The
-siege of Sebastopol and the destruction of the memorable docks have been
-given with the fulness which the industry and gallantry of the sappers
-merited; and in order that the many adventures and enterprises recorded
-in the final years of the history should not fail in interest and
-accuracy, Colonel Sandham, the Director of the Royal Engineer
-Establishment, with the permission of General Sir John Burgoyne, kindly
-lent me the assistance of the Engineers’ Diary of the Siege, as well as
-several collateral reports concerning its progress and the demolition of
-the docks. At the same time I think it right to say, that no attempt has
-been made in these pages to offer a history of the Crimean operations.
-So much only of the details has been worked into the narrative as was
-necessary to preserve unbroken the thread of sapper services in
-connexion with particular works and undertakings.
-
-It should also be borne in mind, that these volumes are devoted to the
-affairs of the Royal Sappers and Miners; and, consequently, that care
-has been taken to touch as lightly as practicable on the services of
-other regiments. Hence the officers of the Royal Engineers have only
-been named when it was desirable to identify them with parties of
-Sappers, whom on certain occasions they commanded.
-
-I feel a loyal pride in being able to state that the work has been
-honoured with the munificent patronage of Her Majesty the Queen, and of
-His Royal Highness the Prince Albert; than which nothing could be more
-acceptable to me, either as an author or a subject.
-
-In closing I beg to express my deep obligations to General Sir John
-Burgoyne, Bart., G.C.B., the officers of the corps generally, my
-personal friends, and the public, for the patronage with which I have
-been favoured; and also to the Press, for the handsome manner in which
-it has noticed and commended my labours.
-
-
-_Brompton Barracks,_
- _March 1857._
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
-
- ------------------
-
-
-In 1836, soon after Lieutenant Robert Dashwood, R.E., was appointed
-Acting Adjutant of the Royal Sappers and Miners at Woolwich, he was
-directed by Brigade-Major, now Colonel Matson, to prepare a list of
-officers of the Royal Engineers who had commanded, from time to time,
-the different companies of the corps. I assisted him in the duty; but
-while he was in the midst of his work, he was prematurely cut off by
-death, and the task of completing the statement devolved on me. It now
-forms a referential record at the head-quarter office.
-
-Led in its progress to consult old documents and returns, I conceived
-the idea of making myself acquainted with the whole history of the
-corps. With this view, after daily fulfilling the routine duty of the
-office, I spent all my leisure intervals in bringing to light old books
-and papers, which for years had been buried in disused depositories and
-stores.
-
-Whilst thus engaged, two Acting Adjutants, Lieutenants F. A. Yorke and
-T. Webb, R.E., were successively appointed to the corps at Woolwich.
-Both officers entered with some spirit into the attempt to trace a
-history of its services; but before they had proceeded to any great
-length, were interrupted in their labours by removal to other stations
-in consequence of promotion. Adjutant Yorke, however, succeeded so far,
-that he drew up a brief account of the formation of the sappers,
-commencing with the Gibraltar company in 1772, and detailed its
-subsequent augmentations and reductions. This statement also forms a
-permanent record in the office; and Captain Webb made fair progress with
-an outline account of its active services. To both officers it was my
-good fortune to afford such aid as they required, in the collection of
-information for their respective efforts.
-
-In 1847, when medals were granted to the veterans of the last war,
-Brigade-Major, now Colonel Sandham, observed the readiness with which I
-spoke of historical events in which the corps was concerned, and of the
-services of particular individuals who had belonged to it. He also saw
-the facility with which I supplied the information required to establish
-the claims of the several applicants for medals and clasps. This induced
-him, after some little conversation on the subject, to direct me to
-prepare for publication a history of the corps. Much fragmentary matter
-I had already accumulated, for twelve years had been consumed by me in
-wading through books and documents in quest of dates and occurrences.
-Nevertheless, it was not without serious misgivings that I set myself
-officially to the task, and the researches and labours embodied in the
-following pages are the result.
-
-In the intervals of important and onerous public duty, the materials for
-the memoir have been collected and the work methodized and written.
-Necessarily severe was the application required under such
-circumstances; but by steady perseverance, even at times when my health
-was scarcely able to bear up against the exertion it needed, I have
-succeeded, without omitting any service that I know of, in completing
-the history to the siege of Sebastopol.
-
-The work certainly is one of no pretension, and on this score may be
-regarded as having cost but little toil in its preparation; but I may
-observe, that from the absence of many particular records, the
-unaccountable neglect in furnishing others, and the striking
-imperfections in many of the remaining papers, arising from complexity,
-vagueness, obliteration, or decay, more than ordinary difficulty,
-research, and trouble were experienced, in gathering the materials
-essential to give anything like a reasonable delineation of the events
-narrated in the Memoir. Paucity of detail in numbers, want of
-description with reference to particular occurrences, and gaps in many
-years from the loss of muster-rolls and official documents, run through
-a period of nearly half a century, from 1772 to 1815: and strange as it
-may appear, even the casualties in action so carefully reported in other
-corps, have, from some inexplicable cause, either been omitted
-altogether in the war despatches or given inaccurately. In later years,
-however, the connexion between the officers of the Royal Engineers and
-the soldiers of the Royal Sappers and Miners has been so fully
-established, that attention to these important minutiæ forms a decided
-feature in the improved command of the corps.
-
-In employments of a purely civil character in which the Royal Sappers
-and Miners have shared, care has been taken to explain, as fully as the
-records and collateral evidence would admit, the nature of its duties;
-and, likewise, to multiply authorities to prove the estimation in which
-it was held for its services and conduct. This has been mainly done, to
-offer a practical reply to an association, incorporated within the last
-twelve years, which, in the course of a futile agitation, endeavoured by
-injurious statements to lessen the corps in public esteem.
-
-All mention of the Royal Engineers in this memoir has been studiously
-suppressed, except when such was unavoidable to give identity to the
-different duties and services of the Royal Sappers and Miners, and also,
-when their direct and particular connexion with the corps in certain
-situations, rendered allusion to them justifiable. This course was
-suggested to me by an officer of high rank, for the obvious reason that,
-as the Royal Engineers is a body entirely distinct from the Sappers and
-Miners, and possesses its own annals, any reference to, or
-particularization of, its services in a work professedly confined to the
-corps, would not only be extraneous, but tend to lessen its value, and
-weaken its interest with those for whose information it was especially
-written.
-
-Here, however, it should be observed, that the Royal Sappers and Miners,
-though a separate and integral body of itself, is nevertheless, and has
-been from the commencement, officered by the Royal Engineers; and
-whatever excellence or advancement is traced in its career and public
-usefulness, whether as soldiers or mechanics, is fairly, in a great
-degree, attributable to the officers; for, in every circumstance of
-service and situation, they have liberally opened up for them new
-channels of employment to engage their faculties and energies, and have
-afforded them at all times scope and facilities to develop their mental
-and physical resources, and to fit them to perform with credit, not only
-the circumscribed duties of soldiers, but the more extended requirements
-of sappers, artizans, and professional men.
-
-By the omission of all but special reference to the officers, room has
-thus been given for mentioning many non-commissioned officers and
-privates, who have attracted public attention and gained encomium for
-their meritorious services; some for their skill and ingenuity; others
-for their integrity and devotion; and others for their acquirements,
-their vigorous exertions and labours; their ardour, their endurance, and
-their valour. While the recognition of such examples cannot fail to
-incite others to emulate the military virtues of their more
-distinguished predecessors and comrades, it is earnestly hoped, that
-every member of the corps will be led to feel a personal interest in its
-reputation and honour, and a pride in its discipline and loyalty; its
-usefulness and efficiency in peace; its heroism and achievements in war.
-
-The drawings were executed on stone by George B. Campion, Esq., master
-of landscape drawing at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. In
-illustrations like those in the present volumes, it was scarcely
-possible to delineate with exactness the complicated ornament which make
-up the _ensemble_ of a soldier’s uniform. Notwithstanding this
-disadvantage, the costume has been well defined, and much interest given
-to the embellishments, by the introduction of accessories,
-characteristic of the duties and employments of the corps.
-
-My respectful acknowledgments are due to Sir John Burgoyne, the
-Inspector-General of Fortifications, for making the subject of my
-exertions known in a circular from his own hand, to the officers of the
-Royal Engineers; and in offering him the expression of my gratitude, I
-think it right with a feeling of sincere thankfulness to mention, that
-the success which has attended that kind appeal, has been more, perhaps,
-than I could reasonably expect. Several of the officers have afforded me
-much encouragement in the work, as well by suggestion and advice, as by
-the liberality of their contributions; but, wanting the liberty to
-publish their names, I am precluded from making a record, to which it
-would have been my pride to give publicity.
-
-To my own corps I am also indebted for many pleasing proofs of concern,
-as evinced in their anxiety to see the undertaking prosper. Nearly 200
-copies have been demanded by the non-commissioned officers, including a
-few of the privates, and when the price of the work is considered, the
-generosity of my patrons is as striking as noble.
-
-To S. W. Fullom, Esq., I here offer the expression of my grateful thanks
-for his amiable and disinterested counsel, cheerfully accorded on the
-many occasions I had to seek it; and for kindly assisting me in looking
-over the sheets as the work passed through the press.
-
-I now submit the volumes to my corps and the profession, and am not
-without hope that they may also be acceptable to a portion of the
-public. As far as the sources of my information and research have
-extended, the memoir will be found truthful and impartial. It was my aim
-to execute it with an integrity that would place me beyond impeachment:
-I therefore feel some confidence that indulgence will be shown for its
-defects, and also for whatever errors, through inadvertency, may have
-crept into the work.
-
- THOMAS CONNOLLY.
-
-_Royal Sappers and Miners’ Barracks,
- Woolwich, March 1855._
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
-
- -------
-
-
- 1772-1779.
- PAGE
-
- Origin of Corps—Its establishment and pay—Engineers to 1
- command it—Its designation—Working
- pay—Recruiting—Dismissal of civil artificers—Names of
- officers—Non-commissioned officers—First
- augmentation—Consequent promotions—Names of other officers
- joined—King’s Bastion—Second augmentation
-
- 1779-1782.
-
- Jealousy of Spain—Declares war with England—Strength of the 10
- garrison at Gibraltar—Preparations for defence and
- employment of the company—Siege commenced—Privations of
- the garrison—Grand sortie and conduct of the company—Its
- subsequent exertions—Origin of the subterranean
- galleries—Their extraordinary prosecution—Princess Anne’s
- battery—Third augmentation—Names of non-commissioned
- officers
-
-
- 1782-1783.
-
- Siege continued—Magnitude of the works—Chevaux-de-frise from 22
- Landport-Glacis across the inundation—Précis of other
- works—Firing red-hot shot—Damage done to the works of the
- garrison, and exertions of the company in restoring
- them—Grand attack, and burning of the battering
- flotilla—Reluctance of the enemy to quit the contest—Kilns
- for heating shot—Orange bastion—Subterranean
- galleries—Discovery of the enemy mining under the
- Rock—Ulterior dependence of the enemy—Peace—Conduct of the
- company during the siege—Casualties
-
-
- 1783.
-
- Duc de Crillon’s compliments respecting the 29
- works—Subterranean galleries—Their supposed
- inefficiency—Henry Ince—Quickness of sight of two boys of
- the company—Employment of the boys during the siege—Thomas
- Richmond and John Brand—Models constructed by them
-
-
- 1783.
-
- State of the fortress—Execution of the works depended upon 39
- the company—Casualties filled up by transfers from the
- line—Composition—Recruiting—Relieved from all duties,
- garrison and regimental—Anniversary of the destruction of
- the Spanish battering flotilla
-
-
- 1786-1787.
-
- Company divided into two—Numerous discharges—Cause of the 43
- men becoming so soon ineffective—Fourth
- augmentation—Labourers—Recruiting,
- reinforcements—Dismissal of foreign artificers—Wreck of
- brig ‘Mercury’—Uniform dress—Working ditto—Names of
- officers—Privileges—Cave under the signal-house
-
-
- 1779-1788.
-
- Colonel Debbieg’s proposal for organizing a corps of 53
- artificers—Rejected—Employment of artillerymen on the
- works at home—Duke of Richmond’s “Extensive plans of
- fortification”—Formation of corps ordered—Singular silence
- of the House of Commons on the subject—Mr. Sheridan calls
- attention to it—Insertion of corps for first time in the
- Mutiny Bill—Debate upon it in both Houses of Parliament
-
-
- 1787-1788.
-
- Constitution of corps—Master artificers—Officers—Rank and 64
- post of the corps—Captains of companies;
- stations—Allowance to captains;
- adjutants—Recruiting—Labourers—“Richmond’s whims”—Progress
- of recruiting—Articles of agreement—Corps not to do
- garrison duty—Sergeant-Majors—John Drew—Alexander
- Spence—Uniform dress—Working dress—Hearts o'
- pipe-clay—“The Queen’s bounty”—Arms, &c.—Distinction of
- ranks—Jews’ wish
-
-
- 1789-1792.
-
- Appointment of Quartermaster and 72
- Colonel-Commandant—Distribution of corps, Captains of
- companies—Jealousy and ill-feeling of the civil
- artificers—Riot at Plymouth—Its casualties—Recruits
- wrecked on passage to Gibraltar—Song, “Bay of Biscay,
- O!”—Defence of the Tower of London against the
- Jacobins—Bagshot-heath encampment—Alterations in the
- uniform and working dress
-
-
- 1793.
-
- War with France—Artificers demanded for foreign 81
- service—Consequent effects—Detachment to West Indies—Fever
- at Antigua—Detachment to Flanders—Siege of
- Valenciennes—Waterdown Camp—Reinforcement to
- Flanders—Siege of Dunkirk—Nieuport—Another reinforcement
- to Flanders—Toulon—Private Samuel Myers at Fort
- Mulgrave—Formation of four companies for service
- abroad—Establishment and strength of corps
-
-
- 1794-1795.
-
- Working dress—Company sails for West 90
- Indies—Martinique—Spirited conduct of detachment
- there—Guadaloupe—Mortality—Toulon—Flanders—Reinforcement
- to company there—Return of the company—Works at
- Gravesend—Irregularities in the corps—Causes—Redeeming
- qualities—Appointment of Regimental Adjutant and
- Sergeant-major—Consequences—Woolwich becomes the
- head-quarters—Alteration in working dress
-
-
- 1795-1796.
-
- Companies to St. Domingo and the Caribbee Islands—Reduction 101
- of St. Lucia—Conduct of company there—Gallantry in forming
- lodgment and converting it into a battery—Attack on
- Bombarde—Distribution and conduct of St. Domingo
- company—Mortality in the West Indies—Detachment to
- Halifax, Nova Scotia—Dougal Hamilton—Detachments to
- Calshot Castle and St. Marcou
-
-
- 1797.
-
- Detachments to Portugal—To Dover—Transfers to the 105
- Artillery-Enlistment of artificers only—Incorporation of
- Gibraltar companies with the corps—Capture of
- Trinidad—Draft to West Indies—Failure at Porto
- Rico—Fording the lagoon, by private D. Sinclair—Private W.
- Rogers at the bridge St. Julien—Saves his
- officer—Casualties by fever in Caribbean company—Filling
- up company at St. Domingo with negroes—Mutinies in the
- fleet at Portsmouth—Conduct of Plymouth company—Emeute in
- the Royal Artillery, Woolwich—Increase of pay—Marquis
- Cornwallis’s approbation of the corps—Mutiny at the
- Nore—Consequent removal of detachment to
- Gravesend—Alterations in dress
-
-
- 1798-1799.
-
- Contribution of corps to the State—Detachment with 116
- expedition to maritime Flanders—Destruction of the Bruges
- canal—Battle near Ostend—Draft to West Indies—Capture of
- Surinam—St. Domingo evacuated—Expedition to
- Minorca—Conduct of detachment while serving
- there—Composition of detachments for foreign
- service—Parties to Sevenoaks and Harwich—Mission to
- Turkey—Its movements and services—Special detachment to
- Gibraltar to construct a cistern for the Navy—Detachment
- with the expedition to Holland—Its services—Origin of the
- Royal Staff Corps
-
-
- 1800.
-
- Mortality in the West Indies—Blockade of Malta—Capture of a 126
- transport on passage from Nova Scotia—Movements and
- services of detachments in Turkey; attacked with
- fever—Anecdote of private Thomas Taylor at
- Constantinople—Cruise of expedition to Cadiz—Attack on the
- city abandoned—Subsequent movements of the expedition;
- Malta; and re-embarkation for Egypt—Statistics of
- companies at Gibraltar
-
- 1801-1802.
-
- Distribution of corps—Dispersion of West India 132
- company—Statistics—Detachment to St. Marcou—Capture of
- Danish settlements—Casualties in West India
- company—Compared with mortality in Gibraltar
- companies—Working dress—Services, &c., of detachment at
- Gibraltar—Conduct of Sergeant W. Shirres—Concession to the
- companies by the Duke of Kent—Cocked hat superseded by the
- chaco
-
-
- 1803-1805.
-
- Party to Ceylon—The treaty of Amiens broken—State of West 141
- India company—Capture of St. Lucia—Tobago—Demerara,
- Essequibo, and Berbice—Works at Spike Island—Capture of
- Surinam—Conduct of private George Mitchell—Batavian
- soldiers join West India company—Fever at
- Gibraltar—Consequent mortality—Humane and intrepid conduct
- of three privates—Invasion of England—Works at
- Dover—Jersey—Chelmsford—Martello towers at Eastbourne—Bomb
- tenders at Woolwich—Recruiting—Volunteers from the Line
- and Militia—Treaty of St. Petersburg—Party to Naples—Ditto
- to Hanover
-
-
- 1806.
-
- First detachment to Cape of Good Hope—Misfortunes at Buenos 153
- Ayres—Reinforcements to Gibraltar—Services at
- Calabria—Formation of Maltese military artificers—Increase
- of pay to royal military artificers—Augmentation to the
- corps and reorganization of the companies—Establishment
- and annual expense—Working pay—Sub-Lieutenants
- introduced—Indiscipline and character of the corps
-
-
- 1807.
-
- Appointments of Adjutant and Quartermaster—Captain John T. 161
- Jones—Disasters at Buenos Ayres—Egypt—Reinforcement to
- Messina—Detachment of Maltese military artificers to
- Sicily—Newfoundland—Copenhagen—Captures in the Caribbean
- Sea—Madeira—Danish Islands in the West Indies—Hythe
-
-
- 1808.
-
- War in the Peninsula—Expedition thither—Detachments to the 165
- seat of war, with Captains Landmann, Elphinstone, Squire,
- Burgoyne, and Smyth—Captain John T. Jones—Reinforcement to
- Newfoundland—Discipline at Halifax—Services at
- Messina—Parties temporarily detached to different
- places—The queue
-
-
- 1809.
-
- Retreat to Coruña—Miserable state of the detachment on 168
- reaching England—Hardships of the stragglers—Capture of
- Martinique—Skill of George Mitchell at the siege—Fever in
- the West Indies—Reduction of the Saintes—Detachment to
- Portugal—Battles of Oporto and Talavera—Casualties in the
- retreat, and distribution of the party—Naples—Zante and
- the Ionian Islands—Term of service of the Maltese military
- artificers—Siege of Flushing—Services of the military
- artificers there—Gallantry, in the batteries, of John
- Millar, Thomas Wild, and Thomas Letts—Conduct of corps at
- the siege—Casualties by the Walcheren fever—Skilful
- conduct of Corporal T. Stevens in the demolitions at
- Flushing—Captain John T. Jones—Servants—Incidental
- detachments
-
-
- 1810.
-
- Capture of Guadaloupe—Of St. Martin’s and St. 175
- Eustatius—Torres Vedras—Anecdote of Corporal William
- Wilson at the Lines—Almeida and Busaco—Detachments to
- Cadiz—Puntales and La Isla—Destruction of Forts Barbara
- and St. Felipe, near Gibraltar—Santa Maura—Occasional
- detachments
-
-
- 1811.
-
- Mortality in the West Indies—Strength and distribution of 178
- detachments in the Peninsula—Recapture of Olivenza—Field
- instruction prior to siege of Badajoz—Conduct of corps at
- the siege—Conduct of Sergeant Rogers in
- reconnoitring—Reinforcement to Portugal and duties of the
- detachment—Its distribution and services—Battle of
- Barrosa; gallant conduct of Sergeant John
- Cameron—Tarragona—Defence of Tarifa—Augmentation to corps
- and reconstruction of companies—Annual expense of
- corps—Command of the companies—Their stationary
- character—The wealthy corporal—New distribution of
- corps—Commissions to Sub-Lieutenants, and ingenious
- inventions of Lieutenant Munro
-
-
- 1812.
-
- Plymouth company instructed in field duties—Engineer 187
- establishment at Chatham—Major Pasley appointed its
- director—Discipline and drill of corps—Its character—Sir
- John Sinclair ex-private—Title of corps changed—Captain G.
- Buchanan—A sergeant acrobat—Cuidad Rodrigo—Exertions of a
- company on the march to the siege—Repairs to the
- fortress—Siege of Badajoz—Difficulties in removing the
- stores to the park—Duties of the sappers in the
- operation—Gallant behaviour of Patrick Rooney and William
- Harry—Also of a party at Fort Picurina, and of Patrick
- Burke and Robert Miller—Hazardous attempt to blow down the
- batardeau in the ditch of the lunette, and conduct of
- corporal Stack—Bravery of a party in mining under the
- bridge of the inundation—Distribution of the Peninsular
- companies and their services—Bridges of Yecla and
- Serrada—Reinforcement to Spain—Salamanca—Burgos, and
- boldness of Patrick Burke and Andrew Alexander at the
- siege—Bridge of Alba—Carthagena—Reinforcement to Cadiz;
- action at Seville—Reinforcement to the Peninsula and
- distribution of the sappers—Green Island—Tarragona—First
- detachment to Bermuda
-
-
- 1813.
-
- Designation of corps modified—Uniform—Working 197
- dress—Arms—Mode of promoting non-commissioned
- officers—Rank of colour-sergeant created—Company to
- Canada—Reinforcement to Bermuda—Sub-Lieutenant Mackenzie
- appointed Town-Major there—Sickness at Gibraltar—Services
- of company in East Catalonia—Malha da Sorda—Services on
- the advance to Vittoria—Bridge at Toro—Blockade of
- Pampeluna—Pyrenees—Stockades near Roncesvalles—San
- Sebastian and services of the corps at the siege—Valour of
- sergeants Powis and Davis—Of private Borland; and of
- corporal Evans—Casualties in the siege—Restoration of the
- fortifications—Pontoon train—Bidassoa—Bridge across it,
- and conduct of privates Owen Connor and
- Nowlan—Vera—Nivelle, and behaviour of corporal
- Councill—Bridge over that river—Bridges over the Nive, and
- daring exertions of private Dowling—Fording the Nive, and
- posts of honour accorded to corporal Jamieson and private
- Braid—Strength and distribution of corps in the
- Peninsula—Recruiting
-
-
- 1814.
-
- Wreck of ‘Queen’ transport; humanity of sergeant Mackenzie; 209
- heroic exertions of private M‘Carthy—Quartermaster;
- Brigade-Major—Santona; useful services of corporal
- Hay—Bridge of Itzassu near Cambo-Orthes; conduct of
- sergeant Stephens—Toulouse—Bridge of the Adour; duties of
- the sappers—Flotilla to form the bridge—Casualties in
- venturing the bar—Conduct of the corps in its
- construction—Bayonne—Expedition to North America—Return to
- England of certain companies from the Peninsula—Company to
- Holland; its duties; bridge over the Maerk; Tholen; Fort
- Frederick—March for Antwerp—Action at Merxam—Esprit de
- corps—Coolness of sergeant Stevens and corporal
- Milburn—Distribution; bridge-making—Surprise of
- Bergen-op-Zoom—Conduct of the sappers, and casualties in
- the operation—A mild Irish-man—Bravery of corporal
- Creighton and private Lomas—South Beveland—Reinforcement
- to the Netherlands—Review by the Emperor of Russia—School
- for companies at Antwerp—Detachments in the Netherlands,
- company at Tournai—Movements of the company in Italy and
- Sicily—Expedition to Tuscany; party to Corfu—Canada;
- distribution of company there, and its active
- services—Reinforcement to Canada—Washington, Baltimore,
- New Orleans—Notice of corporal Scrafield—Expedition to the
- State of Maine
-
-
- 1815.
-
- Siege of Fort Boyer—Alertness of company on passage to New 225
- Orleans—Return of the sappers from North America—Services
- and movements of companies in Canada—Also in Nova
- Scotia—Captures of Martinique and Guadaloupe—Services and
- movements of companies in Italy—Maltese sappers
- disbanded—Pay of Sub-Lieutenants—Ypres—Increase to
- sappers’ force in Holland; its duties and detachments;
- notice of sergeant Purcell—Renewal of the war—Strength of
- the corps sent to the Netherlands—Pontoneers—Battle of
- Waterloo—Disastrous situation of a company in
- retreating—General order about the alarm and the
- stragglers—Sergeant-major Hilton at Brussels—Notice of
- lance-corporal Donnelly—Exertions of another company in
- pressing to the field—Organization of the engineer
- establishment in France—Pontoon train—Magnitude of the
- engineer establishment; hired drivers; Flemish
- seamen—Assault of Peronne, valour of Sub-lieutenant
- Stratton and lance-corporal Councill—Pontoon bridges on
- the Seine—Conduct of corps during the campaign—Corporal
- Coombs with the Prussian army—Usefulness of the sappers in
- attending to the horses, &c., of the department in
- France—Domiciliary visit to Montmartre
-
-
- 1816-1818.
-
- Movements in France—Return of six companies from thence to 241
- England—Strength of those remaining, and detachments from
- them—St. Helena—Return of company from Italy—Disbandment
- of the war company of Maltese sappers—Battle of
- Algiers—Conduct of corps at Valenciennes—Instances in
- which the want of arms was felt during the war—Arming the
- corps attributable to accidental circumstances—Training
- and instruction of the corps in France—Its misconduct—But
- remarkable efficiency at drill—Municipal thanks to
- companies at Valenciennes—Dress—Bugles adopted—Reduction
- in the corps—Sub-lieutenants disbanded—Withdrawal of
- companies from certain stations—Relief of company at
- Barbadoes—Repairing damages at St. Lucia; conduct of the
- old West India company—Corfu—Inspection of corps in
- France—Epaulettes introduced—Sordid conduct of four men in
- refusing to wear them—Murder of private Milne, and
- consequent punishment of corps in France by the Duke of
- Wellington—Return of the sappers from France
-
-
- 1819-1824.
-
- Reduction in the corps—Distribution—Sergeant Thomas Brown, 253
- the modeller—Reinforcement to the Cape, and services of
- the detachment during the Kaffir war—Epidemic at
- Bermuda—Damages at Antigua occasioned by a hurricane—Visit
- to Chatham of the Duke of Clarence—Withdrawal of a
- detachment from Corfu—A private becomes a peer—Draft to
- Bermuda—Second visit to Chatham of the Duke of
- Clarence—Fever at Barbadoes—Death of Napoleon, and
- withdrawal of company from St. Helena—Notice of private
- John Bennett—Movements of the company in
- Canada—Trigonometrical operations under the Board of
- Longitude—Feversham—Relief of the old Gibraltar
- company—Breast-plates—St. Nicholas’ Island—Condition of
- company at Barbadoes when inspected by the Engineer
- Commission—Scattered state of the detachment at the
- Cape—Services of the detachment at Corfu—Intelligence and
- usefulness of sergeant Hall and corporal Lawson—Special
- services of corporal John Smith—Pontoon
- trials—Sheerness—Notice of corporal Shorter—Forage-caps
- and swords
-
-
- 1825-1826.
-
- Dress—Curtailment of benefits by the change—Chacos—Survey of 263
- Ireland—Formation of the first company for the
- duty—Establishment of corps; company to Corfu—Second
- company for the survey—Efforts to complete the companies
- raised for it—Pontoon trials in presence of the Duke of
- Wellington—Western Africa—Third company for the survey:
- additional working pay—Employments and strength of the
- sappers in Ireland—Drummond Light; Slieve Snacht and
- Divis—Endurance of private Alexander Smith—Wreck of
- ‘Shipley’ transport—Berbice; corporal Sirrell at Antigua
-
-
- 1827-1829.
-
- Augmentation—Reinforcement to Bermuda—Companies for Rideau 271
- Canal—Reinforcement to the Cape—Monument to the memory of
- General Wolfe—Increase to the survey
- companies—Supernumerary promotions—Measurement of Lough
- Foyle base—Suggestion of sergeant Sim for measuring across
- the river Roe—Survey companies inspected by Major-General
- Sir James C. Smith; opinion of their services by Sir Henry
- Hardinge—Sergeant-major Townsend—Demolition of the
- Glacière Bastion at Quebec—Banquet to fifth company by
- Lord Dalhousie—Service of the sappers at the citadel of
- Quebec—Notice of sergeants Dunnett and John Smith—Works to
- be executed by contract—Trial of pontoons, and exertions
- of corporal James Forbes—Epidemic at Gibraltar—Island of
- Ascension; corporal Beal—Forage-caps—Company withdrawn
- from Nova Scotia—Party to Sandhurst College, and
- usefulness of corporal Forbes
-
-
- 1830-1832.
-
- The chaco—Brigade-Major Rice Jones—Island of 281
- Ascension—Notice of corporal Beal—Detachment to the Tower
- of London—Chatham during the Reform agitation—Staff
- appointments—Sergeant McLaren the first medallist in the
- corps—Terrific hurricane at Barbadoes; distinguished
- conduct of colour-sergeant Harris and corporal
- Muir—Subaqueous destruction of the ‘Arethusa’ at
- Barbadoes—Return of a detachment to the Tower of
- London—Rideau canal; services of the sappers in its
- construction; casualties; and disbandment of the
- companies—Costume—First detachment to the Mauritius—Notice
- of corporal Reed—Pendennis Castle
-
-
- 1833-1836.
-
- Inspection at Chatham by Lord Hill—Pontoon 289
- experiments—Withdrawal of companies from the
- ports—Reduction of the corps, and reorganization of the
- companies—Recall of companies from
- abroad—Purfleet—Trigonometrical survey of west coast of
- England—Draft to the Cape—Review at Chatham by Lord
- Hill—Motto to the corps—Reinforcement to the
- Mauritius—Inspection at Woolwich by Sir Frederick
- Mulcaster—Mortality from cholera; services of corporals
- Hopkins and Ritchley—Entertainment to the detachment at
- the Mauritius by Sir William Nicolay—Triangulation of the
- west coast of Scotland—Kaffir war—Appointments of ten
- foremen of works—Death of Quartermaster Galloway—Succeeded
- by sergeant-major Hilton—Sergeant Forbes—Notice of his
- father—Lieutenant Dashwood—Euphrates expedition—Labours of
- the party—Sergeant Sim—Generosity of Colonel Chesney,
- R.A.—Additional smiths to the expedition—Loss of the
- ‘Tigris’ steamer—Descent of the Euphrates—Sappers with the
- expedition employed as engineers—Corporal
- Greenhill—Approbation of the services of the
- party—Triangulation of west coast of
- Scotland—Addiscombe—Expedition to Spain—Character of the
- detachment that accompanied it—Passages; action in front
- of San Sebastian—Reinforcement to Spain—Final trial of
- pontoons—Mission to Constantinople
-
-
- 1837.
-
- Change in the dress—Increase of non-commissioned 305
- officers—Services of the detachment at Ametza
- Gaña—Oriamendi—Desierto convent on the
- Nervion—Fuentarabia—Oyarzun—Aindoin—Miscellaneous
- employment of the detachment—Trigonometrical survey west
- coast of Scotland—Inspection at Woolwich by Lord Hill and
- Sir Hussey Vivian—Staff appointments—Labours of sergeant
- Lanyon—Staff-sergeants' accoutrements—Expedition to New
- Holland—Corporal Coles selected as the man Friday of his
- chief—Exploration from High Bluff Point to Hanover Bay;
- difficulties and trials of the trip; great
- thirst—Exertions and critical situation of Coles—His
- courageous bearing—Touching instance of devotion to his
- chief—Employments of the party—Exploration into the
- interior with Coles and private Mustard—Hardships in its
- prosecution—Threatened attack of the natives; return to
- the camp
-
-
- 1838.
-
- Services of party in New Holland—Start for the 315
- interior—Labours of the expedition; corporal Auger—Captain
- Grey and corporal Coles expect an attack—Attitude of
- private Auger at the camp against the menace of the
- natives—Captain Grey and Coles attacked; their critical
- situation: the chief wounded; devotion of Coles—Usefulness
- of Auger—Renew the march; Auger finds a singular
- ford—Discovers a cave with a sculptured face in it—Mustard
- traces the spoor of a quadruped still unseen in New
- Holland—A sleep in the trees—Trials of the party—Primitive
- washing—Auger the van of the adventurers—Humane attention
- of the Captain to Mustard; reach Hanover Bay; arrive at
- the Mauritius—Detachment in Spain—Attack on Orio—Usurvil;
- Oyarzun—Miscellaneous employments of the
- party—Reinforcement to it; Casa Aquirre—Orio—Secret
- mission to Muñagorri—Second visit to the same chief—Notice
- of corporal John Down—Bidassoa—Triangulation of north of
- Scotland—Also of the Frith of the Clyde—Insurrection in
- Canada; guard of honour to Lord Durham—Company inspected
- by the Governor-General on the plains of
- Abraham—Inspection at Niagara by Sir George
- Arthur—Services and movements of the company in Canada;
- attack at Beauharnois—Submarine demolition of wrecks near
- Gravesend—Expedient to prevent accidents by vessels
- fouling the diving-bell lighter—Conduct of the sappers in
- the operations; exertions of sergeant-major Jones—Fatal
- accident to a diver—Intrepidity of sergeants Ross and
- Young—Blasting the bow of the brig ‘William,’ by
- sergeant-major Jones—Withdrawal of the sappers from the
- canal at Hythe
-
-
- 1839.
-
- Expedition to Western Australia under Captain Grey—Excursion 328
- with Auger to the north of Perth—Search for Mr.
- Ellis—Exploration of shores from Freemantle—Bernier and
- Dorre Islands; want of water; trials of the party—Water
- allowance reduced—A lagoon discovered—Privations and
- hardships of the party—Return to Bernier Island for
- stores—Its altered appearance—Destruction of the depôt of
- provisions—Consternation of Coles—Auger’s example under
- the circumstances—Expedition makes for Swan River—Perilous
- landing at Gantheaume Bay—Overland journey to Perth;
- straits of the adventurers—Auger searching for a missing
- man—Coles observes the natives; arrangements to meet
- them—Water found by Auger—A spring discovered by Coles at
- Water Peak—Disaffection about long marches; forced
- journeys determined upon; the two sappers and a few others
- accompany the Captain—Desperate hardships and fatigues;
- the last revolting resource of thirst—Extraordinary
- exertions of the travellers; their sufferings from thirst;
- water found—Appalling bivouac—Coles’s agony and
- fortitude—Struggles of the adventurers; they at last reach
- Perth—Auger joins two expeditions in search of the slow
- walkers—Disposal of Coles and Auger
-
-
- 1839.
-
- Services of the detachment in Spain—Last party of the 341
- artillery on the survey—Survey of South
- Australia—Inspection at Limerick by Sir William
- Macbean—Triangulation of north of Scotland—Also of the
- Clyde—Pontoons by sergeant Hopkins—Augmentation of the
- corps—Also of the survey companies—Supernumerary rank
- annulled—Tithe surveys; quality of work executed on them
- by discharged sappers; efficient surveys of sergeant
- Doull—Increase of survey pay—Staff appointments on the
- survey—Responsibility of quartermaster-sergeant
- M‘Kay—Colonel Colby’s classes—Based upon particular
- attainments—Disputed territory in the State of
- Maine—Movements and services of the party employed in its
- survey; intrepidity of corporal M‘Queen—Experiments with
- the diving-bell—Also with the voltaic battery—Improvement
- in the priming wires by Captain Sandham; sergeant-major
- Jones’s waterproof composition and imitation
- fuses—Demolition and removal of the wreck of the ‘Royal
- George’—Organization of detachment employed in the
- operation—Emulation of parties—Success of the divers;
- labours of the sappers—Diving-bell abandoned—Accident to
- private Brabant—Fearlessness of corporal Harris in
- unloading gunpowder from the cylinders—Hazardous duty in
- soldering the loading-hole of the cylinder—First sapper
- helmet divers—Conduct and exertions of the detachment
-
-
- 1840.
-
- Return of the detachment from Spain—Its conduct during the 354
- war—Survey of the northern counties of England—Notice of
- sergeant Cottingham—Secondary triangulation of the north
- of Scotland—Increase to survey allowances—Augmentation to
- the survey companies—Renewal of survey of the disputed
- boundary in the state of Maine—Corporal Hearnden at
- Sandhurst—Wreck of the ‘Royal George;’ duties of the
- sappers in its removal—Exertions of sergeant-major
- Jones—The divers—An accident—Usefulness of the detachment
- engaged in the work—Boat adventure at Spithead—Andrew
- Anderson—Thomas P. Cook—Transfer of detachment from the
- Mauritius to the Cape—Survey of La Caille’s arc of
- meridian there—Detachment to Syria—Its active services,
- including capture of Acre—Reinforcement to Syria
-
-
- 1841.
-
- Syria—Landing at Caiffa; Mount Carmel—Cave of Elijah; 365
- epidemic—Colour-sergeant Black—Inspection at Beirout by
- the Seraskier; return of the detachment to
- England—Expedition to the Niger—Model farm—Gori—Fever sets
- in; return of the expedition—Services of the sappers
- attached to it—Corporal Edmonds and the elephant—and the
- Princess—Staff-sergeant’s undress—Staff appointments—Wreck
- of the 'Royal George'—Sergeant
- March—Sapper-divers—Curiosities—Under-water pay; means
- used to aid the divers—Speaking under water—Gallantry of
- private Skelton—Alarming accidents—Constitutional
- unfitness for diving—Boundary survey in the state of
- Maine—Augmentation to corps for Bermuda—Sandhurst;
- corporal Carlin’s services—Quartermaster-sergeant
- Fraser—Intrepidity of private Entwistle—Colonel
- Pasley—Efficiency of the corps—Its conduct, and impolicy
- of reducing its establishment—Sir John Jones’s opinion of
- the sappers—And also the Rev. G. R. Gleig’s
-
-
- 1842.
-
- Party to Natal—The march—Action at Congella—Boers attack the 384
- camp—Then besiege it—Sortie on the Boers'
- trenches—Incidents—Privations—Conduct of the detachment;
- courageous bearing of sergeant Young—Services of the party
- after hostilities had ceased—Detachment to the Falkland
- Islands—Landing—Character of the country—Services of the
- party—Its movements; and amusements—Professor Airy’s
- opinion of the corps—Fire at Woolwich; its
- consequences—Wreck of the 'Royal George'—Classification of
- the divers—Corporal Harris’s exertions in removing the
- wreck of the ‘Perdita’ mooring lighter—Assists an
- unsuccessful comrade—Difficulties in recovering the
- pig-iron ballast—Adventure with Mr. Cussell’s
- lighter—Isolation of Jones at the bottom—Annoyed by the
- presence of a human body; Harris, less sensitive, captures
- it—The keel—Accidents—Conflict between two rival
- divers—Conduct of the sappers employed in the
- operation—Demolition of beacons at Blythe Sand,
- Sheerness—Testimonial to sergeant-major Jones for his
- services in connection with it
-
-
- 1842.
-
- Draft to Canada—Company recalled from thence—Its services 401
- and movements—Its character—Labours of colour-sergeant
- Lanyon—Increase to Gibraltar—Reduction in the corps—Irish
- survey completed; force employed in its
- prosecution—Reasons for conducting it under military
- rule—Economy of superintendence by sappers—Their
- employments—Sergeants West, Doull, Spalding,
- Keville—Corporals George Newman, Andrew Duncan—Staff
- appointments to the survey
- companies—Dangers—Hardships—Average strength of sapper
- force employed—Casualties—Kindness of the Irish—Gradual
- transfer of sappers for the English survey—Distribution;
- Southampton
-
-
- 1843.
-
- Falkland Islands; services of the detachment 412
- there—Exploration trips—Seat of government
- changed—Turner’s stream—Bull-fight—Round Down Cliff, near
- Dover—Boundary line in North America—Sergeant-major
- Forbes—Operations for removing the wreck of the 'Royal
- George'—Exertions of the party—Private Girvan—Sagacity of
- corporal Jones—Success of the divers—Exertions to recover
- the missing guns—Harris’s nest—His district pardonably
- invaded—Wreck of the 'Edgar,' and corporal Jones—Power of
- water to convey sound—Girvan at the ‘Edgar’—An
- accident—Cessation of the work—Conduct of the detachment
- employed in it—Sir George Murray’s commendation—Longitude
- of Valentia—Rebellion in Ireland—Colour-sergeant Lanyon
- explores the passages under Dublin Castle—Fever at
- Bermuda—Burning of the ‘Missouri’ steamer at
- Gibraltar—Hong-Kong—Inspection at Woolwich by the Grand
- Duke Michael of Russia—Percussion carbine and
- accoutrements
-
-
- 1844.
-
- Remeasurement of La Caille’s arc at the Cape—Reconnoitring 431
- excursion of sergeant Hemming—Falkland Islands—Draft to
- Bermuda—Inspection at Gibraltar by General Sir Robert
- Wilson—Final operations against the ‘Royal George’—and the
- ‘Edgar’—Discovery of the amidships—incident connected with
- it—Combats with crustacea—Success of corporal Jones—Injury
- to a diver—Private Skelton drowned—Conduct of the
- detachment employed in the work—Submarine repairs to the
- ‘Tay’ steamer at Bermuda by corporal Harris—Widening and
- deepening the ship channel at St. George’s—Accidents from
- mining experiments at Chatham—Notice of corporal John
- Wood—Inspection at Hong-Kong by Major-General D’Aguilar
-
-
- 1845.
-
- Sheerness—Increase to the corps at the Cape—Survey of 444
- Windsor—Skill of privates Holland and Hogan as
- draughtsmen—Etchings by the latter for the Queen and
- Prince Albert—Unique idea of the use of a
- bullet—Inspection at Gibraltar by Sir Robert
- Wilson—Falkland Islands—Discharges on the survey duty
- during the railway mania
-
-
- 1846.
-
- Boundary surveys in North America—Duties of the party 448
- engaged in it—Mode of ascertaining longitudes—Trials of
- the party; Owen Lonergan—The sixty-four mile line—Official
- recognition of services of the party—Sergeant James
- Mulligan—Kaffir war—Corporal B. Castledine—Parties
- employed at the guns—Graham’s Town—Fort
- Brown—Patrols—Bridge over the Fish River—Field services
- with the second division—Dodo’s kraal—Waterloo Bay—Field
- services with the first division—Patrol under Lieutenant
- Bourchier—Mutiny of the Swellandam native infantry—Conduct
- of corps in the campaign—Alterations in the dress—Drainage
- of Windsor—Detachment to Hudson’s Bay—Its
- organization—Journey to Fort Garry—Sergeant Philip
- Clark—Private R. Penton—Corporal T. Macpherson—Lower Fort
- Garry—Particular services—Return to England
-
-
- 1846.
-
- Exploration survey for a railway in North America—Services 465
- of the party employed on it—Personal services of sergeant
- A. Calder—Augmentation to the corps—Reinforcement to
- China—Recall of a company from Bermuda—Royal presents to
- the reading-room at Southampton—Inspection at Gibraltar by
- Sir Robert Wilson—Third company placed at the disposal of
- the Board of Works in Ireland—Sergeant J. Baston—Services
- of the company—Distinguished from the works controlled by
- the civilians—Gallantry of private G. Windsor—Coolness of
- private E. West—Intrepid and useful services of private
- William Baker—Survey of Southampton, and its incomparable
- map
-
-
- 1847.
-
- Detachments in South Australia—Corporal W. 478
- Forrest—Augmentation to the corps—Destruction of the Bogue
- and other forts—Services of the detachment at Canton—First
- detachment to New Zealand—Survey of Dover and
- Winchelsea—Also of Pembroke—Flattering allusion to the
- corps—Sir John Richardson’s expedition to the Arctic
- regions—Cedar Lake—Private Geddes’s encounter with the
- bear—Winter quarters at Cumberland House—Road-making in
- Zetland—Active services at the Cape—Company to Portsmouth
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
- VOL. I.
-
- PLATE PAGE
- I. Uniform 1786 _To face Title._
- II. Working-dress 1786 49
- III. Uniform 1787 69
- IV. Working-dress 1787 69
- V. Uniform 1792 79
- VI. Working-dress 1794 80
- VII. Working-dress 1795 100
- VIII. Uniform 1797 115
- IX. Uniform 1802 140
- X. Working-dress 1813 198
- XI. Uniform 1813 198
- XII. Uniform 1823 258
- XIII. Uniform and working-dress 1825 262
- XIV. Uniform 1832 287
- XV. Uniform 1843 429
-
- VOL. II.
-
- XVI. Uniform 1854 }
- XVII. Working-dress 1854 } _To face Title._
-
-
-
-
- HISTORY
-
- OF THE
-
- ROYAL SAPPERS AND MINERS.
-
- ---------------------
-
- 1772—1779.
-
-Origin of Corps—Its establishment and pay—Engineers to command it—Its
- designation—Working pay—Recruiting—Dismissal of civil artificers—Names
- of officers—Non-commissioned officers—First augmentation—Consequent
- promotions—Names of other officers joined—King’s Bastion—Second
- augmentation.
-
-
-Before the year 1772, the works at Gibraltar were mainly executed by
-civil mechanics from the Continent and England, who were not engaged for
-any term of years, but were hired like ordinary artificers, and could
-leave the Rock whenever they felt disposed. Not being amenable to
-military discipline, they were indolent and disorderly, and wholly
-regardless of authority. The only means of punishing them was by
-reprimand, suspension, or dismissal, and these means were quite
-ineffectual to check irregularities. The dismissal of mechanics and
-replacing them by others was always attended with considerable
-inconvenience and expense, and often failed to secure an equivalent
-advantage. Consequently, the works progressed very slowly, imposing much
-additional trouble and anxiety upon the officers. Even the better class
-of artificers—locally termed “guinea men” from their high wages—who had
-something at stake in their situations, could not be relied upon. It
-therefore became necessary that steps should be taken to put a stop to
-the evil, and to secure the services of a sufficient number of steady,
-obedient mechanics, upon whom dependence could, at all times, be placed,
-for the proper execution of the works.
-
-With this view, Lieutenant-Colonel William Green, the chief engineer at
-the fortress, suggested the formation of a company of _military_
-artificers as the only expedient. Of the value of this suggestion some
-experience had been derived, from the occasional occupation on the
-works, of mechanics belonging to the different regiments in garrison.
-Indeed, ever since the taking of Gibraltar, in 1704, soldiers had so
-been employed, particularly artillerymen, whose services to the fortress
-were always found to be beneficial. There was every reason, therefore,
-to expect that, when the department became entirely military in its
-character, corresponding results on a large scale would ensue. Besides
-which it was considered, that the employment of a military company on
-the works, organized expressly for the purpose, would produce a great
-saving of expense to the public; and also, that the men would be ready
-to participate in any military operation for the defence of the place,
-either as artificers or soldiers, should our relations with other
-countries render it desirable.
-
-Influenced by these considerations, Colonel Green submitted the
-suggestion to the Governor and Lieutenant-Governor of Gibraltar. Too
-well aware themselves of the disadvantages of the system of _civil_
-labour in carrying on the works of The fortress, they were favourable to
-the trial of any experiment that promised success; and in recommending
-the plan to the attention of the Secretary of State, they expressed
-their decided opinion that many advantages would certainly arise to the
-service and the fortress by its adoption. The royal consent was
-accordingly given to the measure in a Warrant, under the sign manual,
-dated 6th March, 1772; and thus originated the corps, whose history is
-attempted to be traced in these pages.
-
-The Warrant authorized the raising and forming of a company of
-artificers to consist of the following numbers and ranks, with the
-regimental pay annexed to each rank:—
-
- s. d.
- 1 Sergeant and as adjutant[1] 3 0 a-day.
- 3 Sergeants, each 1 6 ”
- 3 Corporals 1 2 ”
- 60 Privates, or working men skilled in the ”
- following trades:—Stone-cutters,
- masons, miners, lime-burners,
- carpenters, smiths, gardeners, or
- wheelers, each 0 10
- 1 Drummer 0 10 ”
- ——
- 68 Total.
-
-And officers of the corps of engineers were appointed to command this
-new body, to which was given the name of “The Soldier-Artificer
-Company.”[2]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- The rank of sergeant and adjutant—an odd combination certainly—was not
- adopted. The senior non-commissioned officer was styled
- sergeant-major. The authority for this are the muster rolls and
- returns of the company. But it is not a little remarkable that, in
- opposition to the fact, evidence should exist of the best kind for
- veracity, to oppose the averment. The error appears on a tablet built
- in Charles the Fifth’s wall adjoining Hargrave’s parade at Gibraltar,
- to the memory of the widow of the first sergeant-major of the corps.
- Thus runs the epitaph:—
-
- To the Memory of MARTHA, wife of
- THOMAS BRIDGES, Sergeant, and as Adjutant
- to His Majesty’s Artificers' Company.
- She departed this life, 4th February, 1773,
- Aged 38 years.
-
- -------
-
- A more loving wife or friend sincere
- Never will be buried here—
- Charitable she was to all,
- Altho' her income it was small.
-
- Excuse the stanza. Perhaps the sergeant-major was a tetchy man,
- obstinate in maintaining his rights, and took this private opportunity
- of asserting his warranted rank and publishing the military anomaly in
- imperishable marble.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The Warrant does not designate the company by such a title. It is
- there called “The Military Company of Artificers.” How the change took
- place, does not appear.
-
------
-
-Each non-commissioned officer and man was to receive as a remuneration
-for his labour a sum not exceeding two reals[3] a day in addition to his
-regimental pay; but this extra allowance was only to be given for such
-days as he was actually employed on the works.
-
------
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- A real is equal to 4½_d._ English.
-
------
-
-The recruiting for the company was a service of but little difficulty,
-as permission was granted to fill it with men from the regiments then
-serving in the garrison; and although the company was restricted to the
-taking of properly qualified mechanics of good character, yet, at the
-end of the year, after supplying the places occasioned by casualties,
-there were only eighteen rank and file wanting to complete. As vacancies
-occurred, such of the soldiers of the garrison as came up to the
-established criteria, and wished to be transferred into the company,
-were allowed the indulgence; and this mode was the only one followed,
-for filling up the soldier-artificers, for many years after their
-formation.
-
-The whole of the civil mechanics were not discharged from the department
-on account of this measure. Such of them were retained as were
-considered, from their qualifications and conduct, to be useful in the
-fortress, and they were placed under the superintendence of the
-non-commissioned officers of the company, who were appointed foremen of
-the different trades. The foreign artificers were, with few exceptions,
-dismissed; and twenty English “contracted artificers,” or “guinea men,”
-were sent home. Previously, however, such of the good men of the number
-as were willing to be “entertained” in the company were permitted the
-option of enlisting, but none availed themselves of the offer.
-
-The officers of engineers who were first attached to the company were
-the following:—
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel William Green, captain.
- Captain John Phipps, Esq.
- Capt.-Lieut. and Captain Theophilus Lefance, Esq.
- Lieutenant John Evelegh.
-
-And they were desired to take under their command and inspection the
-non-commissioned officers and private men of the company, and to pay
-particular attention to their good conduct and regular behaviour.[4]
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The order upon this subject is given at length, as it touches upon
- other matters besides the discipline of the company.
-
- _Chief Engineer’s Orders, Gibraltar, 31st May, 1772._
-
- “By the Governor’s orders of the 20th May, the company of
- soldier-artificers now raising and forming under the command of the
- Chief Engineer as captain, Captain Phipps, Captain-Lieutenant Lefance,
- and Lieutenant Evelegh, are appointed officers to the said company,
- and are, therefore, conformable to their respective ranks, henceforth
- to take under their command the conduct and inspection of the
- non-commissioned officers and private men of the said company, and to
- pay all sort of military attentions to their good order and regular
- behaviour, according to the rules and discipline of war;[4a] also to
- the particular standing orders, as well as to the accustomary
- regulations of the garrison relative to all the required and expected
- duties of a soldier and an artificer, both when on, as well as when
- off, duty. Captain Phipps is also appointed to keep the accounts and
- to see the company duly paid their full military subsistence. The
- company to be paid conformable to His Majesty’s Warrant dated March
- 6th, 1772, upon the same footing as the rest of the troops in
- garrison, viz., at seventy pence sterling the Mexico or Cobb,
- agreeable to which, the non-commissioned officers and men are to be
- paid weekly as follows, the deduction for the surgeon excepted:—
-
- Sergeant-major 5 dollars, 3 reals, 3-1/7 quarts.
- Sergeants—each 2 ” 5 ” 9-3/7 ”
- Corporals—each 2 ” 0 ” 12-4/7 ”
- Privates and drummer—each. 1 ” 4 ” 0
-
- One-halfpenny sterling a-week to be stopped from each private and
- drummer for the surgeon, and the non-commissioned officers to be
- stopped in proportion to their respective pays.”
-
-Footnote 4a:
-
- No provision was made this year for extending the Mutiny Act to the
- company; nor, indeed, was it noticed in any subsequent Act till 1788,
- when its introduction gave rise to much discussion in the House of
- Commons. The idea of subjecting artificers to martial law was attacked
- with satirical bitterness by the eloquent Sheridan.
-
------
-
-On the 30th June, the date on which the company was first mustered, the
-non-commissioned officers were—
-
- Sergeant-major Thomas Bridges.[5]
- Sergeant David Young, _Carpenter_.
- Sergeant Henry Ince, _Miner_.
-
-To these were added, on the 31st December—
-
- Sergeant Edward Macdonald.
- Corporal Robert Blair, and
- Corporal Peter Fraser.
-
-and soon afterwards—
-
- Corporal Robert Brand,
-
-who completed the non-commissioned officers to the full number
-authorised by the warrant.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- The more particular duties of the Sergeant-major, as described in the
- Chief Engineer’s Order of 31st May, 1772, were “to carry all the
- general orders to the Chief Engineer, and the officers of the company,
- through the means of the other sergeants; also to make known the
- general orders to the rest of the non-commissioned officers and
- private men.” These he was required to attend to, “in lieu of an
- adjutant.” By the royal warrant, he should have been appointed to that
- rank, and not designated “sergeant-major.” No reason can be traced for
- altering the title. The _first_ adjutant was an officer of
- engineers—Lieutenant Evelegh. He was appointed 15th June, 1773.
- Bridges enlisted into the 30th regiment in 1751, from which he was
- transferred to the corps as Sergeant-major, and being reduced during
- the siege (28th September, 1781), was discharged from the company 10th
- October, 1781.
-
-At the time the soldier-artificers were raised, the extensive works
-ordered to be executed by his Majesty in October, 1770, were in
-progress, and furnished an excellent opportunity for testing their
-capabilities and merits. The advantage of the change, and the consequent
-benefits accruing to the fortress, were soon apparent. Scarcely had the
-company been in existence a year, before Major-General Boyd, the
-Lieutenant-Governor, impressed with the conviction of its usefulness,
-represented, in several communications to Lord Rochford, the Secretary
-of State, the expediency of augmenting it; and he was the more urgent
-for its sanction as the new works in hand—which were absolutely
-essential for the defence of the place—required to be hastened with all
-possible despatch. The recommendation, coming from so high an authority,
-met with ready attention, and a Warrant dated 25th March, 1774, was
-accordingly issued for adding twenty-five men to the company. Its
-establishment was then fixed as follows:—
-
- Sergeant-major 1
- Sergeants 4
- Corporals 4
- Drummer 1
- Private artificers @b83
- ——
- Total 93
-
-To the former list of non-commissioned officers were now added—
-
- John Richmond, sergeant.
- John Brown,[6] corporal.
-
-Ensign William Skinner joined the company 20th May, and Ensign William
-Booth 23rd June.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- In Hay’s ‘Western Barbary,’ chap. x., Murray’s edit., there is a very
- pleasing anecdote of the “half-Irish Sultan,” Mulai Yezeed, in which
- the name of Brown of the Royal Sappers and Miners, properly
- Soldier-Artificers, is introduced. To controvert a particular point to
- which it refers, the anecdote in an abridged form, is subjoined.
-
- Sidi Mahomed, soon after his elevation to the throne of Morocco, about
- the middle of the last century, was desirous of completing the
- defences of Fez, and knowing the superiority of the English in
- engineering, he applied to the British Government for the aid of some
- person skilled in the art. The request was acceded to, and an
- experienced sergeant of the Sappers and Miners having been selected as
- a fit person, was placed at the disposal of his Majesty. Sidi Mahomed
- received him with much kindness, and allotted a suitable house for his
- reception. The sergeant continued in the service of the Sultan for
- some time after he had completed the works at Fez, and at length died,
- leaving his wife without issue. After his interment, the widow, who
- was a pretty Irishwoman, sought an interview with the Sultan, in order
- to obtain a pension and the means of returning to her own country. His
- Majesty was much struck by her fair and comely appearance, treated her
- with condescension and benevolence, and expressed in endearing
- overtures his attachment to her. Under no promises of future greatness
- could she be induced to relinquish the faith of her fathers for the
- creed of Islam, and to take an exalted station in the imperial harem.
- Sidi Mahomed, old as he was, was too much fascinated to yield so
- choice a prize on a mere question of belief, and making the fullest
- sacrifices to satisfy her religious scruples, the poor, friendless,
- Irish widow, became the Sultana of Morocco!
-
- Corporal Brown, afterwards promoted to be sergeant, is the
- non-commissioned officer alluded to. He was a mason by trade, and
- joining the artificers on the 2nd January, 1773, he seemingly soon
- acquired the reputation of being an able foreman and an indispensable
- man. It was in 1776 he was sent to Fez, not in the middle of the
- century as stated in the anecdote, and he died there early in 1781.
- That year, or probably later, Widow Brown became the Sultana of Sidi
- Mahomet, and Mulai Yezeed, the reputed son of the widow by the Sultan,
- _was then 31 years old_! The age of Mulai may be _gleaned_ from Hay’s
- tale, but more directly _seen_ in Dr. Lempriere’s ‘Journey through the
- Barbary States.’ According to the latter author, who was at Tetuan in
- 1790, Mulai was the “offspring of an English renegado,” and then about
- 40 years of age. The Sultan died at a patriarchal age in 1790, and
- Mulai Yezeed succeeded him.
-
------
-
-No sooner was the company completed to its new establishment than the
-engineers proceeded with greater spirit in the erection of the King’s
-Bastion, the foundation stone of which was laid in 1773 by General
-Boyd.[7] This work, which was of material consequence for the safety of
-the fortress, caused the General much concern, and he employed his best
-efforts for its completion.[8] But, unavoidable delay in some official
-arrangements at home, coupled with a little misunderstanding and the
-loss of many civil mechanics, greatly retarded the work.
-
------
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- General Boyd, attended by General Green, the chief engineer, and many
- officers of the garrison, laid the foundation stone of this bastion,
- with the ceremony usual on such occasions. When he had finished it, he
- made this remarkable speech. “This is the first stone of a work which
- I name the King’s Bastion; may it be as _gallantly defended_, as I
- know it will be _ably executed_; and may _I live to see it resist the
- united efforts of France and Spain_.”—Drinkwater’s Siege of Gibraltar,
- p. 290, 1st edit. The desire of the worthy general was realized. He
- not only lived to see what he wished, but materially to assist in the
- operations of the siege.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- To carry on the work with vigour, an opening was made in the sea-line,
- which, as long as it continued so, made the fortress defenceless in
- that part. Similar openings were made in the line some years before by
- a storm, which, being observed by Monsieur Crillon, who commanded at
- St. Roque, he proposed a scheme for an attempt on the Rock.
- Remembering this, the General always kept an anxious eye upon the gap;
- but he concealed his fears, lest they should fill the people with
- alarm, and the French or Spaniards with notions of invasion. He would
- not post any additional guards or picquets there for its protection,
- but gave private directions that all the guns and howitzers that could
- be brought into position in that part should be attended to. He,
- however, did not conceal his uneasiness from the Secretary of State;
- and in urging upon Lord Rochford the necessity for his being furnished
- with the means for completing the bastion, he quaintly remarked,
- “there is an idea of glory, my lord, in the thought of being killed in
- defending a breach made by the enemy, but to be knocked o' th' head in
- the defence of one of our own making would be a ridiculous death.”
-
------
-
-This led General Boyd in 1775 to apply for another augmentation to the
-soldier-artificers, which was the more necessary as three regiments,
-furnishing a number of mechanics for the fortifications, were about to
-leave the Rock; and also as the foreign artificers—several of whom had
-been re-engaged since the pressure of the works—were like birds of
-passage, abandoning the fortress when they pleased. This the
-soldier-artificers could not do. To their attention and assiduity,
-therefore, the progress of the bastion and other works of the garrison
-were mainly attributable; and General Boyd, in a letter to Lord
-Rochford, dated 5th October, 1775, gave them full credit for their
-services. “We can,” wrote the General, “depend only upon the artificer
-company for constant work, and on soldiers occasionally. Had it not been
-for the artificer company, we should not have made half the progress in
-the King’s Bastion, as well as in the other works of the garrison.”
-
-On the 16th January, 1776, His Majesty sanctioned an addition to the
-company of one sergeant, one corporal, one drummer, and twenty privates,
-all masons, who were to be reduced again when the Hanoverian troops
-should leave the fortress.[9] With this increase the company consisted
-of 116 non-commissioned officers and men.
-
------
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- When the Hanoverian troops left Gibraltar, the company had the best
- character for efficiency and utility, and its numbers therefore were
- not reduced.
-
------
-
-Steadily the works advanced; soon the King’s Bastion[10] was finished,
-and the fortress was now in such a state of defence as greatly to
-alleviate the apprehension, which, a few years before, caused General
-Boyd so much anxiety. Though not exactly all that could be desired to
-oppose the onslaught of a determined and daring adversary, it was yet
-capable of a long and obstinate resistance; and, from the political
-phases of the period, it did not seem at all unlikely that its strength
-would soon be tried, and the prowess and fortitude of the garrison
-tested.
-
------
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- At this bastion the company worked, by express orders, from gun-fire
- in the morning to gun-fire in the evening, as also on Sundays. All the
- work was of cut stone, and skilfully executed. A model of it,
- exquisitely wrought in polished stone, is in the Rotunda at Woolwich.
- It formerly belonged to George III. In 1820, George IV. presented it
- to the Royal Military Repository.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1779-1782.
-
-Jealousy of Spain—Declares war with England—Strength of the garrison at
- Gibraltar—Preparations for defence and employment of the company—Siege
- commenced—Privations of the garrison—Grand sortie and conduct of the
- company—Its subsequent exertions—Origin of the subterranean
- galleries—Their extraordinary prosecution—Princess Anne’s
- battery—Third augmentation—Names of non-commissioned officers.
-
-
-Gibraltar, ever since its capture by the English in 1704, had been a
-source of much jealousy and uneasiness to Spain, and her desire to
-restore it to her dominions was manifested in the frequent attempts she
-made with that view. Invariably she was repelled by the indomitable
-bravery of the garrison; but a slave to her purpose, she did not desist
-from her efforts, and in the absence of any real occasion for
-disagreement with England, scrupled not to create one, in order that she
-might attack, and if possible, regain the fortress.
-
-A favourable opportunity for the purpose at length arrived. Soon after
-the convention of Saratoga in 1777, the Americans entered into an
-alliance with France, which was the cause of a rupture between the
-latter nation and Great Britain. Hostilities had been carried on for six
-months, when Spain insinuated herself into the dispute under pacific
-pretensions. Her proposals, however, were of such a nature as rendered
-it impossible for the British Government to accept them without
-lessening the national honour; and being rejected, the refusal was made
-the pretext for war. It was accordingly declared by Spain on the 16th
-June, and her eager attention was at once turned to Gibraltar. On the
-21st of the same month she took the first step of a hostile nature, by
-closing the communication between Spain and the fortress.
-
-At this time the garrison consisted of an army of 5,382 officers and men
-under General Eliott. Lieut.-General Boyd was second in command. Of this
-force the engineers and artificers amounted to the following numbers
-under Colonel Green:—
-
- Officers 8
- Sergeants 6
- Drummers 2
- Rank and File 106[11]
- ——
- Total 122
-
-No particular demonstration on the part of the Spaniards immediately
-followed the closing of the communication; but General Eliott,
-anticipating an early attack upon the Rock, made arrangements to meet
-it. All was activity and preparation within the fortress; and the
-engineers with the artificers were constantly occupied in strengthening
-the defences. For better accomplishing this paramount service, the
-company was divided into three portions on the 23rd August, and directed
-to instruct the line workmen in the duties required of them. To prevent
-misunderstanding with regard to the _line_ non-commissioned officers—who
-might under certain circumstances become litigious—the Chief Engineer
-issued orders to the effect, that all such soldiers coming into the
-king’s works, were to take directions from the non-commissioned officers
-of the company in the execution of their professional duty.[12]
-
------
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- The company wanted two privates to complete.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- As foreseen by the Chief Engineer, disputes soon arose between the
- non-commissioned officers of the company and the line, with regard to
- superintendence and direction. The fact having come to the Brigadier’s
- knowledge, he renewed, on the 10th July, 1781, his former order in a
- more imperative tone.
-
------
-
-On the 12th September, General Eliott commenced operations by opening a
-fire on the enemy, which was so unexpected, that the latter were
-surprised and dispersed. On recovering from the panic, they scarcely
-ventured, or indeed cared, to retaliate; for their object obviously was,
-not to subject themselves to a costly expenditure of ammunition, shot,
-&c., but to distress the garrison by famine, and thereby obtain an easy
-surrender. In this, however, they were disappointed; for the enduring
-hardihood of the garrison, and the occasional arrival of relief,
-frustrated their object, and compelled the Spaniards to have recourse to
-the more expensive and difficult method of besieging the place.[13]
-
------
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- The strength of the company, including officers, when the provision
- supplies arrived, under Admiral Rodney, in February, 1780, and again
- under Admiral Darby, in April, 1781, was, on both occasions, stated to
- be 124. See ‘An authentic and accurate Journal of the late Siege of
- Gibraltar,’ pp. 22, 170.
-
------
-
-At this period the privations of the soldiers in the fortress were of so
-severe a nature, that many of them were constrained to seek expedients
-from unusual resources to supply their wants; and in this way, thistles,
-dandelion, and other wild herbs, the produce of a barren rock, were used
-to satisfy their cravings. The following enumeration of some of the
-necessaries of life, with their prices affixed, will afford an idea of
-the extent of the scarcity:—
-
- _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._
- Mutton or beef . 2 6 to 3 6 per lb. sometimes higher.
- Salt beef or pork 1 0 to 1 3 per lb.
- Biscuit crumbs 0 10 to 1 0 per lb.
- Milk and water 1 3 a pint.
- Eggs 0 6 each.
- A small cabbage 1 6
- A small bunch of outward leaves 0 6
-
-Thus curtailed in their provisions, the wonder is, that the men were at
-all capable of supporting life, and keeping their opponents in check.
-But notwithstanding this embarrassing privation, their energy and
-courage were by no means weakened, nor their spirit and ardour
-depressed.
-
-In November, 1781, the Spaniards were very zealous in completing their
-defences; so much so that towards the latter part of the month their
-batteries presented an appearance at once stupendous and formidable.
-This proud bulwark naturally arrested the Governor’s attention, and as
-naturally engendered the determination to assault and destroy it. On the
-26th November, he desired a selection to be made from the troops for
-this purpose. To each of the right and centre columns a detachment of
-the company—in all twelve non-commissioned officers as overseers, and
-forty privates—was attached, under Lieutenants Skinner and Johnson of
-the Engineers; and 160 working men from the line were directed to assist
-them. To the left column a hundred sailors were told off to do the duty
-of pioneers. The soldier-artificers were supplied with hammers, axes,
-crow-bars, fire-faggots, and other burning materials. Upon the setting
-of the moon at three o’clock on the morning of the 27th November the
-sortie was made. The moment Lieut.-Colonel Hugo, who had charge of the
-right column, took possession of the parallel, Lieutenant Johnson with
-the artificers and pioneers commenced with great promptitude and
-dexterity to dismantle the works. Similar daring efforts succeeded the
-rush of Lieutenant Skinner’s artificers and workmen into the St. Carlo’s
-Battery with the column of Lieut.-Colonel Dachenhausen; but the number
-of the soldier-artificers attached to the sortie, whose ardour and
-labours were everywhere apparent, being both inconsiderable and
-insufficient to effect the demolition with the expedition required, the
-Governor sent back to the garrison for the remainder of the company to
-come and assist in the operation.[14] Hurrying to the spot to share in
-the struggle, they were soon distributed through the batteries; and the
-efficiency of their exertions was sensibly seen, in the rapidity with
-which the works were razed and in flames. Only one of the company was
-wounded.[15]
-
------
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Captain Luttrell, in some remarks in the House of Commons in 1788,
- relative to the expediency of raising a corps of military artificers,
- stated, “that at Gibraltar, where a similar body had been kept up
- during the siege, they had been of infinite service. When our troops
- had, in a sortie, possessed themselves of some of the enemy’s works,
- they could not destroy them until they had sent back to the garrison
- for the corps of artificers, who soon demolished them.”—Gent. Mag. 58,
- part 2, 1788.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- London Gazette, 12,256. 25 to 29 December, 1781.
-
------
-
-General Eliott in his despatch on this sortie, observes, “The pioneers,”
-meaning artificers, “and artillerists, made wonderful exertions, and
-spread their fire with such amazing rapidity, that in half an hour, two
-mortar batteries of ten 13-inch mortars, and three batteries of six guns
-each, with all the lines of approach, communication, traverses, &c. were
-in flames and reduced to ashes. Their mortars and cannon were spiked,
-and their beds, carriages, and platforms destroyed. Their magazines blew
-up one after another, as the fire approached them.”[16]
-
------
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- London Gazette, 12,256. 25 to 29 December, 1781.
-
------
-
-Shortly after the sortie the repairs to the defences at the north front
-and other works of the fortress, found full employment for the company.
-Leisure could not be permitted, and the necessary intervals of rest were
-frequently interrupted by demands for their assistance, particularly in
-caissonning the batteries at Willis’s.[17] Sickness also set in about
-this time; nearly 700 of the garrison were in hospital; the working
-parties were curtailed; and officers' servants and others, unused to
-hard labour and unskilled in the use of tools, were sent to the works to
-lessen the fatigue to which their less-favoured comrades were constantly
-subjected. Much extra duty and exertion were thus necessarily thrown
-upon the company, and though frequently exposed to imminent danger, they
-worked, both by night and day, with cheerfulness and zeal. In the
-sickness that prevailed, they did not share so much as might be supposed
-from the laborious nature of their duties, sixteen only being returned
-sick, leaving eighty-one available for the service of the works.
-
------
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- To narrate the different services performed by the company during the
- siege, would not only be tedious, but necessarily incomplete, from no
- _detailed_ record of them being preserved. A reference, however, to
- ‘Drinkwater’s History,’ though particularization is not even there
- attempted, will afford a tolerable idea of their labours.
-
------
-
-On a fine day in May 1782, the Governor, attended by the Chief Engineer
-and staff, made an inspection of the batteries at the north front. Great
-havoc had been made in some of them by the enemy’s fire; and for the
-present they were abandoned whilst the artificers were restoring them.
-Meditating for a few moments over the ruins, he said aloud, “I will give
-a thousand dollars to any one who can suggest how I am to get a flanking
-fire upon the enemy’s works.” A pause followed the exciting exclamation,
-when sergeant-major Ince of the company, who was in attendance upon the
-Chief Engineer, stepped forward and suggested the idea of forming
-galleries in the rock to effect the desired object. The General at once
-saw the propriety of the scheme, and directed it to be carried into
-execution.[18]
-
------
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Whether the sergeant-major obtained the thousand dollars as a douceur
- from the General is a question never likely to be satisfactorily
- answered. The probability is, that he did not receive the reward for
- his suggestion in this form, but some daily allowance commensurate
- with his skill and the importance of the duty. I was informed by the
- late Quarter-master-sergeant Britton Francis, who possessed a
- remarkable memory, and whose father was in the company before him,
- that Ince contracted for the work, and—such was the story current in
- his day—received for all the excavations, one guinea per running foot!
- Judging from an expression in a letter from the Duke of Richmond to
- Captain Evelegh, the Commanding Engineer at Gibraltar, dated 4th
- August, 1784, this tradition is an extravagant exaggeration. His Grace
- observes, “I am told that the excavation of the galleries is now
- constructed for, all expenses included, at one rial per foot cube;”
- and he adds, “I am very glad to find that a work which promises to add
- such effectual defences to the place, can be carried on at so cheap a
- rate; and I make no doubt, that great improvements will still be made
- by the Governor in this system of defences and lodgment for stores and
- troops under the rock.”
-
------
-
-Upon orders being issued by the Chief Engineer, twelve good miners of
-the company were selected for this novel and difficult service, and
-sergeant-major Ince was nominated to take the executive direction of the
-work. On the 25th of May, he commenced to mine a gallery from a place
-above Farringdon’s Battery (Willis'), to communicate, _through the
-rock_, to the notch or projection in the scarp under the Royal Battery.
-The gallery was to be six feet high and six feet wide. The successful
-progress of this preliminary work was followed by a desire to extend the
-excavation from the cave at the head of the King’s lines, to the cave at
-the end of the Queen’s lines, of the same dimensions as the former
-gallery. A body of well-instructed miners was expressly appointed for
-the duty,[19] and on the 6th July, they began this new subterranean
-passage. On the 15th, the first “embrasure was opened in the face of the
-rock communicating with the gallery above Farringdon’s.” To effect this,
-“the mine was loaded with an unusual quantity of powder, and the
-explosion was so amazingly loud, that almost the whole of the enemy’s
-camp turned out at the report: but what,” adds the chronicler, “must
-their surprise have been, when they observed whence the smoke
-issued!”[20] The gallery was now widened to admit of the placement of a
-gun with sufficient room for its recoil, and when finished, a 24-pounder
-was mounted in it.[21] Before the ensuing September, five heavy guns
-were placed in the gallery; and in little more than twelve months from
-the day it was commenced, it was pushed to the notch, where a battery,
-as originally proposed, was afterwards established and distinguished, on
-account of its extensive capacity, by the name of “St George’s
-Hall.”[22]
-
------
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- The Chief Engineer’s orders for the performance of this service were
- as follows:—“22nd May, 1782. A gallery 6 feet high, and 6 feet wide,
- through the rock, leading towards the notch nearly under the Royal
- Battery, to communicate with a proposed battery to be established at
- the said notch, is immediately to be undertaken and commenced upon by
- 12 miners, under the executive direction of sergeant-major Ince.”
- Again: “5th July, 1782. A gallery of communication, 6 feet 6 inches
- high, and 6 feet wide, through the intermediate rock, between the cave
- at the head of the King’s lines, and the cave near the west end of the
- Queen’s lines, is forthwith to be commenced upon by a body of miners
- and labourers expressly appointed for that service.”—See also
- ‘Drinkwater’s Siege,’ Murray’s edit., 1846, pp. 112 and 117.
-
------
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- ‘Drinkwater’s Siege,’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 118.
-
------
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Drinkwater observes, page 118, that “the original intention of this
- opening was to communicate air to the workmen, who, before, were
- almost suffocated with the smoke which remained after blowing the
- different mines; but on examining the aperture more closely, an idea
- was conceived of mounting a gun to bear on all the enemy’s batteries,
- excepting Fort Barbara.” To ascribe it to this accidental circumstance
- is natural enough, but there is reason to suppose, the statement
- excusably differs from the fact. The galleries were begun with the
- express object of arming them with ordnance to play on the enemy’s
- works; and the formation of the embrasure alluded to, was simply the
- earnest of a settled scheme; the first hostile step in its
- development.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- ‘Drinkwater’s Siege,’ Murray’s edit., 1846, note, p. 118.
-
------
-
-At Princess Anne’s Battery (Willis'), on the 11th June, a shell from the
-enemy fell through one of the magazines, and, bursting, the powder
-instantly ignited and blew up. The whole rock shook with the violence of
-the explosion, which, tearing up the magazine, threw its massive
-fragments to an almost incredible distance into the sea. Three merlons
-on the west flank of the battery, with several men who had run behind
-them for shelter, were blown into the Prince’s lines beneath, which,
-with the Queen’s lower down the rock, were almost filled with the
-rubbish ejected from the upper battery, as also with men dreadfully
-scorched and mangled. The loss among the workmen was very severe.
-Fourteen were killed and fifteen wounded.[23] Private George Brown, a
-mason of the company, was amongst the former.
-
------
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- ‘Drinkwater’s Siege,’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 113.
-
------
-
-In July the company could only muster ninety-two men of all ranks,
-including the wounded and sick, having lost twenty-two men during the
-siege by death, six of whom had been killed. This was the more
-unfortunate, as the siege was daily assuming a more serious aspect, the
-enemy collecting in greater force, and the effect of the cannonade upon
-the defences more telling and ruinous. Naturally the Governor’s
-attention was called to the deficiency; and as his chief dependence
-rested upon the soldier-artificers for the execution and direction of
-the more important works, he was not only anxious for their completion
-to the authorized establishment, but convinced of the desirableness of
-augmenting them. In this view he was the more confirmed, by the
-representations of Major-General Green, the chief engineer, and
-Lieutenant-General Boyd. As soon, therefore, as an opportunity offered,
-he urgently requested the Duke of Richmond, then Master-General of the
-Ordnance, to fill up the company with mechanics from England, and also
-to make a liberal increase to its establishment. His Grace accordingly
-submitted the recommendation to His Majesty, and a Warrant, dated 31st
-August, 1782, was issued ordering the company to be increased with 118
-men. Its establishment now amounted to—
-
- 1 Sergeant-major.
- 10 Sergeants.
- 10 Corporals.
- 209 Working-men.
- 4 Drummers.
- ——
- Total 234
-
-To carry out the wishes of General Eliott, the Duke of Richmond employed
-parties in England and Scotland to enlist the required number, which for
-the most part consisted of carpenters, sawyers, and smiths. With great
-spirit and success the recruiting was conducted; and in less than a
-month 141 mechanics—more than enough to meet both the deficiency and the
-authorized increase—were embarked for the Rock on board the transports
-which accompanied the relieving fleet under Lord Hood. Twenty landed on
-the 15th October; a similar number next day, and the remaining 101 on
-the 21st. By this increase the carpenters were 66 in number, the sawyers
-31, and the smiths 57. The masons at this time were 30 strong.
-
-The non-commissioned officers,[24] as they stood immediately after this
-augmentation, were as follows:—
-
- _Sergeant-major_—Henry Ince.
-
- _Sergeants_:—
-
- David Young, _carpenter_.
- Edward Macdonald.[25]
- Robert Blyth,[26] _mason_.
- Alexander Grigor.
- James Smith, _smith_.
- Thomas Jackson, _smith_.
- Robert Brand, _mason_.
- Robert Daniel.
- Joseph Makin, _mason_.
- Thomas Finch,[27] _carpenter_.
-
- _Corporals_:—
-
- Robert Newell, _mason_.
- Hugh Sirrige, _carpenter_.
- Joseph Chambers,[28] _mason_.
- James Carey, _carpenter_.
- Joseph Woodhead,[29] _mason_.
- John Morrison, _mason_.
- John Harrison, _mason_.
- John Fraser, _carpenter_.
- Thomas Harrenden, _carpenter_.
- Antonio Francia,[30] _mason_.
-
-And the officers were, in addition to those mentioned at pp. 4 and 5,
-Lieutenants William M‘Kerras, John Johnston, and Lewis Hay.
-
------
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- It is not intended to give the names of the non-commissioned officers
- entire at any future period. In this instance they have been
- mentioned, not so much for the interest of the general reader, as to
- preserve them. With those whose names have already been noted, these
- constitute the first race of non-commissioned officers in the corps.
-
------
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- By the Chief Engineer’s Order of 27th October, 1781, sergeant
- Macdonald, an active and good non-commissioned officer, was appointed
- to inspect and take care of all the drains throughout the fortress in
- the room of sergeant-major Bridges, as also to keep the keys of the
- gratings, and to see them locked, to prevent ingress or egress by
- their means. This duty was considered a very important one, both from
- the facility the drains afforded for the entrance of the enemy and for
- desertions from the place, and also from the health of the garrison
- being in a great measure affected by their state. Not unfrequently
- during heavy rains, the gravel on the rock, washed down by the
- torrent, would rush into the drains and choke them up. To clear them,
- the company of artificers was invariably called upon, often at night;
- and on one occasion, in April, 1813, private William Liddle, who was
- foremost in one of the great drains, after unlocking the grating, was
- carried down the sewer with the flood into the sea, and drowned.
-
------
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- Blyth served fifteen years in the 2nd Foot, and joined the company
- 14th June, 1773. He was promoted to be sergeant on the 18th April,
- 1781, in succession to sergeant Brown who died at Fez, and whose widow
- became the Sultana of Morocco. By his industry and frugality he
- amassed considerable property, and expended about 20,000 dollars in
- buildings at the fortress. He was well known as a zealous freemason,
- and erected a wine-house at the corner of the Eleventh, since called
- South Parade, in which the meetings or lodges of the fraternity were
- held free of expense. He was much respected by the inhabitants, and
- became very popular among them. On the 31st January, 1800, he was
- discharged from the corps, after a service of nearly forty-two years,
- and died at the Rock about 1804, Blyth had a nephew in the Tripoline
- navy, of whom a few particulars may not be uninteresting. His name was
- Peter Lisle. When quite a youth, Peter was wrecked at Zoara, on the
- coast of Tripoli. He was one of three only who escaped. For a time he
- endured great hardships, but at length succeeded in getting on board a
- British merchantman. In 1792 he was at Gibraltar, on board the
- ‘Embden’ letter of marque, Lynch and Ross, owners. This vessel
- afterwards went to Tripoli with two consuls on board; and Lisle, then
- chief mate, was placed in charge of the cargo, some of which was corn.
- On arriving at Tripoli, the barrels containing the corn were found to
- have been plundered, and Lisle was called upon to account for the
- deficiency. This he could not do; a quarrel ensued between the captain
- and himself, and resigning his situation, he landed, and entered the
- service of the Bashaw. Having been chief mate of an English vessel was
- a strong recommendation in his favour, and he was at once appointed
- gunner of the castle. Associated with a strange people, he readily
- conformed to their manners and customs, embraced Mahommedan tenets—at
- least in appearance—and assumed the name of Mourad Reis. About 1794 he
- was nominated captain of a xebeck mounting eighteen guns; and in the
- course of time, by his naval skill and abilities, became the High
- Admiral of the Tripoline Fleet and Minister of Marine. He married one
- of the daughters of the Bashaw, Sidi Yusuf, had a fine family, and
- enjoyed an ample income. Besides a house in the city, he had a villa
- and gardens in the Meshiah among the date-groves, which exhibited
- evidence of great taste and care, and were enriched with many trees of
- various species brought by him from different places at which he
- touched in Europe. He was a prudent and sagacious counsellor, gave
- excellent advice to the Bashaw, which was always based on good common
- sense—a quality not superabundant in the Divan—and was of great
- service to Lord Exmouth during his Algerine expedition. His appearance
- was venerable, he dressed richly, commanded much respect, and when
- addressing British officers—whom he always treated with great courtesy
- and hospitality—spoke with a broad Scotch accent, and sometimes
- entertained them with a relation of his own stirring adventures. He
- was unpopular at times, as great politicians sometimes are. Blaquiere
- says (1813), “Poor Peter was no longer an object of consideration with
- any party.” During the stay of Captain Lyon at Tripoli in 1818, Peter
- was in banishment, but the consul and chief people gave him an
- excellent character. Later, however, he again rose into confidence,
- for when Captain Beechey was there in 1821, Mourad Reis was much
- considered by his Highness, and acted as interpreter on the occasion
- of the Captain’s audience with his Highness the Bashaw. He also proved
- of great service to Captain W. H. Smyth, R.N. On the fall of the
- Bashaw—Yusuf Karamanli—he retreated to Sfax in Tunis, since which his
- fate is uncertain. When in the zenith of his power and greatness he
- paid occasional visits to Gibraltar. On entering the bay, he always
- fired a salute of four guns in honour of his uncle, serjeant Blyth,
- whom he treated with marked respect. This practice, however, he at
- length discontinued, owing to a shot, fired by mistake from one of his
- guns, having struck the wall of a ramp just above Hargrave’s Parade
- whilst he was paying his relative the usual affectionate compliment.
-
------
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- Finch joined the company on the 21st October, 1782, at the request of
- the Duke of Richmond, in whose service he had been employed at
- Goodwood. Anxious to secure him for the company, his Grace promised
- not only to make him a sergeant at once, but to give him a written
- protection to preserve to him as long as he remained, irrespective of
- his conduct, the pay of that rank. Under these circumstances Finch
- accepted the protective credential, enlisted, and sailed with Lord
- Hood for the Rock. Holding such a charter, it was not to be wondered
- at if he sometimes overstepped the line of prudence. Not by any means
- particular in his appearance, nor scrupulous in his conduct or habits,
- he was not unfrequently brought before his officers; but no matter how
- flagrant his offence, the only punishment that could be awarded to him
- was suspension for a month or two from rank, but not from pay. Captain
- Evelegh, of the engineers, finding that Finch was becoming rather
- troublesome, and his sentences of but little effect, endeavoured to
- obtain the Duke’s warrant from its possessor, but he refused to
- surrender it, observing to the captain, “If you get hold of it,
- good-bye to my rank and pay.” Finch, however, was a first-rate
- carpenter and foreman, and these qualifications more than
- counterbalanced his occasional delinquencies. He was discharged from
- the corps on the 13th April, 1802.
-
------
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- Chambers joined the company 21st September, 1772, from the 2nd
- Regiment of Foot, in which he had served two years. In 1791 he was
- promoted to be sergeant-major, on the discharge of Ince. In the summer
- of 1796 he was sent to Woolwich in a deranged state of mind, and on
- the 1st December of that year was discharged. Soon afterwards he was
- domiciled in a madhouse, where, his malady increasing, he was—it has
- been reported—smothered according to the cruel practice then in vogue
- with regard to incurable cases.
-
------
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- Woodhead joined the company 16th May, 1774, from the 12th Regiment, in
- which he had served seven years and a quarter. In November, 1791, he
- was promoted to be sergeant, and was discharged 17th July, 1807, on a
- pension of 2_s._ 7_d._ a-day, after a service of upwards of forty
- years. At Gibraltar he was found to be invaluable in the construction
- and repairs of the sea-line wall. He possessed a good share of
- intelligence; was a strong, portly, blustering mason, and well adapted
- for the heavy and laborious duties for which he was always selected.
- At Woolwich he was the military foreman of masons for many years, and
- was intrusted by Captain Hayter, then Commanding Royal Engineer, with
- the building of the wharf wall in the Royal Arsenal—a work highly
- creditable to the Engineer Department, and to Woodhead as the
- executive overseer.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- Afterwards anglicised to Anthony Francis, was wounded by a shell at
- Willis’s. He and his brother Dominick were natives of Portugal, and
- the only foreigners in the company. Antonio was a Catholic; and as it
- was desired to preserve the Protestant character of the corps, a
- simple but effectual plan was taken to win his adherence to the Church
- of England. He asked leave to be married. The indulgence was refused
- unless he became a Protestant. _La Fiancée_ was also a Catholic; but
- as a great event in their lives—which promised them no end of
- happiness—was likely to be indefinitely postponed by a stubborn
- acquiescence to a creed for which, probably, they felt but little
- interest, both renounced the belief of their fathers, and were married
- as members of the national faith. Their family were baptized and
- educated as Protestants, but the old man on his death-bed, returned to
- Mother-Church and died a Catholic. Three of his sons, now old men,
- fill comfortable appointments at Gibraltar. Their cousins, merchants
- at the Rock, own the plain called the “Spanish Race-course,” above a
- mile beyond the Lines. One, Mr. Francis Francia, is British Consul at
- San Roque. Midway between the village of Campo and the consulate
- stands his farm, which is cultivated with enlightened taste, and
- enriched with rare exotics in fruits and flowers.—Kelaart’s Botany and
- Topography of Gibraltar and its neighbourhood, pp. 179, 183.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1782-1783.
-
-Siege continued—Magnitude of the works—Chevaux-de-frise from Landport
- Glacis across the inundation—Précis of other works—Firing red-hot
- shot—Damage done to the works of the garrison, and exertions of the
- company in restoring them—Grand attack, and burning of the battering
- flotilla—Reluctance of the enemy to quit the contest—Kilns for heating
- shot—Orange Bastion—Subterranean galleries—Discovery of the enemy
- mining under the Rock—Ulterior dependence of the enemy—Peace—Conduct
- of the company during the siege—Casualties.
-
-
-In August the siege daily wore a more significant appearance, and the
-enemy was diligent in concentrating his resources—unlimited both in
-means and materials—to make an extraordinary attack upon the fortress.
-To cope with these preparations General Eliott was no less alert. All
-was ardour and cheerfulness within the garrison, and every one waited
-impatiently for an opportunity to end the strife, which had held
-thousands close prisoners to their posts for more than three years.
-
-At this time the defensive works were very extensive, and many important
-alterations had yet to be made in several of the batteries, to afford
-more effectual cover to the artillery. The workmen consequently were
-greatly increased. Daily, nearly 2,000 men of the line were handed over
-to the engineers for the service of the fortifications; and the
-soldier-artificers were employed in their greatest force—two only being
-in hospital—to instruct and oversee them. In the more difficult works
-requiring experience, and the exercise of skill and ability, the company
-always laboured themselves.
-
-In the most vulnerable part of the fortress, from the foot of Landport
-Glacis adjoining Waterport, to the sloping palisades on the causeway
-across the inundation, the greater part of the carpenters of the company
-were occupied in fixing a chevaux-de-frise. They completed the work
-without the least interference from the enemy—a surprising instance of
-his inattention or forbearance.
-
-While the chevaux-de-frise was in course of erection, covered ways were
-being constructed at the different lines on the north front, large and
-lofty traverses were raised along the line wall, the flank of the
-Princess Anne’s Battery was rebuilt, the subterranean passages were
-pushed forward with vigour, and a covered way from the Grand Parade to
-the Orange Bastion was completed. Green’s Lodge and the Royal Battery
-were also caissoned with ship-timber, and considerable alterations were
-made at Willis’s. Indeed nothing was omitted to render the fortress
-capable of sustaining any attack to which it might be subjected from the
-enemy’s immense and well-armed batteries.
-
-These works and many others of a similar nature were in progress when
-the firing of red-hot shot from the north front, under General Boyd’s
-directions, commenced upon the enemy’s batteries. The effect of this
-destructive expedient was astounding, and the demolition of the enemy’s
-lines in great part soon followed. Panic-stricken or confused, the
-besiegers returned but a tardy fire, and the injury sustained by it was
-of little moment.
-
-The bold attack of the garrison, however, aroused the Spaniards, who,
-quickly repairing their works, opened, on the next day, a warm and
-powerful fire upon the Rock from 170 guns of large calibre. Nine
-line-of-battle ships also poured in their broadsides, in which they were
-assisted by fifteen gun and mortar boats. Considerable injury was thus
-done to the north front, as also to the Montague and Orange Bastions;
-the obstructions at Landport were likewise in great measure demolished,
-and many other works were partially razed. The engineers with the
-artificers and workmen were unremitting in their exertions, both during
-the night and in the day-time, to restore the defences where their
-importance, from their exposed situation, rendered immediate reparation
-desirable. At Landport, notwithstanding the sharp firing of the enemy,
-the carpenters of the company were constantly detached to repair the
-fresh-recurring breaches, which, Drinkwater states, “were kept in a
-better state than might have been expected.”
-
-This attack and retaliation, however, were as yet only preliminary to
-the greater one which was to follow. The interval was filled up by
-discharges of cannon, averaging 4,000 rounds in the twenty-four hours.
-On the 12th September the combined fleets of France and Spain arrived
-before the Rock with ten floating batteries, bearing 212 guns; while
-their land batteries, strong and terrible, mounted 200 heavy guns, and
-were protected by an army of 40,000 men.
-
-In their several stations the battering flotilla were soon moored, and
-the fleet anchored in less than ten minutes. The first ship having cast
-her anchors, that moment the garrison artillery began to throw its
-burning missiles. A tremendous rejoinder from the enemy succeeded.
-Upwards of 400 pieces of the heaviest artillery were disgorging their
-dreadful contents at the same instant. Of these the garrison only
-employed 96. For hours the balance of the contest was equal, the
-battering ships seemed invulnerable; but, at length, the red-hot shot
-gave evidence of their efficacy in the sheets of resistless flame that
-burst in all directions from the flotilla. By the 14th the whole of the
-floating batteries were burnt: their magazines blew up one after
-another; and it was a miracle, that the loss of the enemy by drowning
-did not exceed the numbers saved by the merciful efforts of the
-garrison.
-
-Notwithstanding this appalling reverse the enemy were still reluctant to
-quit the contest. Many proofs they had had of the unconquerable spirit
-of the besieged even whilst suffering from pinching privation, and
-warring against such overwhelming odds; but they still clung to the hope
-of compelling the surrender of their invincible adversaries, though
-their repeated defeats should have taught them a far different lesson.
-
-This obstinacy, of course, necessarily caused other and more effectual
-preparations to be made in the fortress, to meet and withstand any
-future attacks. Red-hot shot was considered to be the grand specific. To
-supply it in sufficient quantities, the company of artificers erected
-kilns in various parts of the garrison. Each kiln was capable of heating
-100 shots in little more than an hour. By this means, as Drinkwater
-writes, “the artificers were enabled to supply the artillery with a
-constant succession for the ordnance.”
-
-The struggle continued for some time much less terrific than has just
-been stated. From 1,000 to 2,000 rounds, however, were poured into the
-garrison in the twenty-four hours, and were followed up with more or
-less briskness for a few months, according to the varying caprice of the
-assailants. During this cannonade, the artificers under the engineers
-were constantly engaged in the diversified works of the fortress, and
-they began to rebuild the whole flank of the Orange Bastion on the
-sea-line, 120 feet in length. All the available masons and miners of the
-company were appointed to this important work, and were greatly
-strengthened on the arrival of the 141 mechanics under Lord Hood. In the
-face of the enemy’s artillery, the artificers continued fearlessly to
-rear the flank, and at last completed it in about three months, to the
-amazement and satisfaction of the Governor and the garrison. The
-erection of such a work, in solid masonry, and under such circumstances,
-is perhaps unprecedented in any siege, and is alike highly honourable to
-the engineers and to the company.
-
-Nor was the subterranean gallery under Farringdon’s Battery prosecuted
-with less zeal under serjeant-major Ince. Five embrasures by this time
-had been opened in the front of the Rock facing the neutral ground. The
-miners exerted themselves with an energy that was conspicuous and
-commendable. This singular work seemed to be the Governor’s hobby; he
-expected much from it, and ordered a similar Battery for two guns to be
-cut in the Rock, near Croutchet’s Battery, above the Prince of Hesse’s
-Bastion. Its completion, however, was not effected until after the
-siege.
-
-To the schemes of the enemy there appeared to be no end; neither did
-they lack hope nor want confidence. They had failed to obtain the
-submission of the garrison by famine; equally so, by a protracted
-bombardment; nor was their tremendous attack by a bomb-proof flotilla,
-assisted by their formidable land batteries, attended with better
-success. They now attempted a fourth stratagem, to mine a cave in the
-Rock by which to blow up the north front, and thus make a breach for
-their easy entrance into the fortress. Chimerical as the project might
-appear, it was conducted with some spirit, and occasioned the garrison
-much employment. Information of the infatuated design was, in the first
-instance, given by a deserter from the enemy, which, however, was
-cautiously received; and as it was impracticable to perceive the miners
-at work, doubts still existed whether the enemy had actually embarked in
-the scheme. These doubts were at length removed by sergeant Thomas
-Jackson,[31] of the artificer company, by whose enterprising efforts the
-movements of the enemy were rendered indisputable. It was his duty to
-reconnoitre[32] the north front, in addition to other services for which
-he was held responsible. Anxious to ascertain the cause of so much
-mysterious activity at the Devil’s Tower, he descended the steep and
-rugged rock by means of ropes and ladders. The attempt was as bold as it
-was hazardous. Stopped by an opening very near to the base of the cliff
-he explored the entrance, and hearing the hum of voices and the busy
-strokes of hammers and picks he was well assured of the purpose for
-which the excavation was intended. Climbing the steep again, he reported
-what he had discovered. A stricter watch was therefore kept upon the
-Tower to prevent communication between it and the Rock. Hand-grenades
-and weighty fragments of stone were frequently hurled over the precipice
-to terrify the workmen below, and choke up the entrance to the gallery;
-and though these means did not make the intrepid miners relinquish their
-project, they yet greatly interrupted its progress. The notion of the
-engineer who proposed the mine must have been the result of desperation,
-for what must have been its nature to crumble in its explosion a huge
-mass of compact rock, nearly 1,400 feet of perpendicular height, into a
-roadway, by which to enter the fortress as through a breach?
-
------
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Joined the company August, 1776, from the 56th Foot, in which he had
- served eleven years. Discharged about 1789.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Reconnoitering appears to have been a duty that devolved upon
- sergeants of the company. On the 25th December, 1782, two soldiers
- attempted to desert from Mount Misery; one “got down, though the rope
- broke, which accident was the cause of the other being retaken. A few
- days after a sergeant of the artificers was ordered to reconnoitre the
- place where this deserter descended, and he got down far enough to
- discover the unfortunate man dashed to pieces at the foot of the
- precipice,”—‘Drinkwater.’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 100.
-
------
-
-Since the flotilla had been burnt and the fleet had disappeared, it was
-evident that the enemy now depended for a triumph on their gun-boats and
-land-batteries, and also the mine at the Devil’s Tower. For a time they
-warmly plied the fortress with shot and shell, to which the garrison
-responded with considerable animation. Intervals followed, induced by
-indecision or caprice, in which the firing from the enemy was very
-desultory and inefficacious; but that from the garrison was always well
-sustained. The soldiers of the Rock seemed to rise in spirit and
-activity as the enemy declined in these qualities. With the latter, the
-barometer of their hopes fell with their energies. Still they
-fruitlessly laboured on, the mine under the Rock being the principal
-object of their attention, until relieved from the disgrace of another
-defeat, by the arrival of news from home of the signing of preliminaries
-for a general peace. The intelligence was communicated to the garrison
-on the 2nd February, 1783, and on the 5th, the last shot in the conflict
-was fired from the fortress. Thus terminated a siege, extending over a
-period of nearly four years, which, when all the circumstances connected
-with it are taken into account, can scarcely find its parallel in the
-chronicles of ancient or modern warfare.
-
-During the whole of this memorable defence, the company of artificers
-proved themselves to be good and brave soldiers; and no less conspicuous
-for their skill, usefulness, and zeal on the works. With their conduct
-and exertions in the performance of their various professional duties,
-their officers were always well pleased; and, not unfrequently, the
-Governor, and General Boyd, in witnessing their services, encouraged and
-flattered them with expressions of their admiration. In later days, when
-the expediency of raising a _corps_ of military artificers was discussed
-in the House of Commons, Captain Luttrell stated, “that during the
-siege, the corps at Gibraltar had been found of infinite service.”[33]
-
------
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- ‘Gentleman’s Magazine,’ 58, part 2, 1788.
-
------
-
-The following is a detail of the casualties that occurred in the company
-at this siege:—
-
- Officers. Sergeants. Rank and File. Total.
-
- Killed[34] 0 1 6 7 }
-
- Wounded, severely 0 0 7 7 } 49
-
- Wounded, but recovered 2 3 30 35 }
-
- Dead by sickness 0 0 23 23
-
- —— —— —— ——
-
- Total 2 4 66 72
-
------
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- Sergeant John Richmond—date unknown.
- Corporal Charles Tabb } 25th November, 1781.
- Mason Adam Parsons }
- Mason Adam Sharp—5th March, 1782.
- Mason George Brown—11th June, 1782.
- Nailor Robert Shepherd—16th January, 1783.
-
- The name of the other man killed cannot be ascertained, as the
- documents of the company from the commencement of the siege to the
- 30th September, 1781, are lost.
-
------
-
-Besides which, two men having plundered the King’s stores, were executed
-for the offence at the Convent in Irish Town, on the 29th May, 1781.[35]
-
------
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- The names of the criminals were Artificers Samuel Whitaker and Simon
- Pratts.
-
------
-
-It is, however, satisfactory to mention, that of the forty-three
-desertions recorded to have taken place from the garrison, none were
-from the artificer company. One regiment was decreased eleven men from
-this cause, and another nine.
-
-
-
-
- 1783.
-
-Duc de Crillon’s compliments respecting the works—Subterranean
- galleries-Their supposed inefficiency—Henry Ince—Quickness of sight of
- two boys of the company—Employment of the boys during the siege—Thomas
- Richmond and John Brand—Models constructed by them.
-
-
-The cessation of hostilities brought the commanders of the two powers
-together, and a most interesting interview took place between them.
-During the visit of the Duc de Crillon, he was shown all the marvels of
-the Rock; but the fortifications especially engaged his attention.
-Having been conducted to the batteries on the heights, his Grace made
-some remarks on the formidable appearance of the lower defences, and on
-the good state of the batteries in so short a period. “These,” writes
-Drinkwater, “produced some compliments to the chief engineer;” and,
-continues the historian, “when conducted into the gallery above
-Farringdon’s Battery—now called Windsor—his Grace was particularly
-astonished, especially when informed of its extent, which at that time
-was between 500 and 600 feet. Turning to his suite, after exploring the
-extremity, he exclaimed, these works are worthy of the Romans.”[36]
-
------
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Drinkwater’s ‘Siege of Gibraltar.’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 163.
-
------
-
-For many years the galleries thus eulogized by the Duke were in course
-of construction, and are formed, as already stated, by deep excavations
-in the solid rock. Passing round the north face in two tiers,[37]
-mounting about forty pieces of heavy ordnance, they command the approach
-to the fortress from the neutral ground, and render it almost
-impregnable on that side. Large magazines and spacious halls—in like
-manner hewn out of the rock—are attached to them. The work, as a whole,
-executed principally by the jumper and blasting, is curious and even
-marvellous, bearing also unequivocal evidence of ingenuity and of
-immense labour. Than these subterranean passages and chambers, no better
-testimony need scarcely be desired of the successful superintendence of
-sergeant-major Ince and of the skill and exertions of the company.
-
------
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Called Lower, or Union Galleries; and Upper, or Windsor Galleries.
-
------
-
-Notwithstanding the formidable character of these defences, doubts seem
-to exist as to their real efficiency in a siege. These doubts have
-arisen from the idea that the report of the explosion would not only be
-deafening, but that the smoke would return into the galleries and
-suffocate the men.[38] No experiments have ever been made with the view
-of ascertaining these particulars: speculation is therefore properly
-admissible. Once, indeed, in 1804, they were fired in salvo to dispel,
-if possible, the then raging fever;[39] and at distant intervals since,
-_some_ of the guns have been discharged; but no complaint was ever
-made—at least became public—of the inutility of these galleries from the
-causes stated. To expect a loud report is certainly natural, but much
-less so the recoil of the smoke, as a strong current of air is always
-passing in the galleries, and rushing with some force through the
-embrasures. No matter how sultry the day, how still the air, or how
-fiercely the sun may beam upon the Rock, in these galleries a strong
-breeze is constantly felt; and the fresher the wind from the outside,
-whether from the north-east, and blowing directly into the embrasures,
-or sweeping round the Rock, the stronger is the current within the
-galleries to force back or disperse the smoke. But little, therefore, of
-the vapour can find its way back, and that little must be _much less_
-annoying to the gunners than in an open field when, firing smartly in
-the teeth of the wind, the whole volume turns back and beclouds them as
-long as the cannonade continues. However, should the alleged defect be
-found on trial to exist, there is no reason to fear but that the
-military engineer will readily adopt some effectual contrivance for
-removing the annoyance, and for obtaining all that power and efficiency
-which the galleries were designed to possess and should be capable of
-commanding.
-
------
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Walsh’s ‘Campaigns in Egypt,’ 1803, p. 5. Wilkie, ‘On British Colonies
- considered as Military Posts,’ in United Service Journal, Part ii.,
- 1840, p. 379.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Maule’s ‘Campaigns of North Holland and Egypt,’ &c., p. 303.
-
------
-
-Since these excavations—these vaults of solitude—which excite some
-degree of awe from their magnitude, and the proud array of ordnance that
-arm them—have always been highly praised by military men, and been
-visited both by officers and others as a species of marvel at the
-fortress, it will not be out of place to introduce the projector—Henry
-Ince—to notice. He was born in 1737 at Penzance in Cornwall, was brought
-up to the trade of a nailor, and afterwards acquired some experience as
-a miner. Early in 1755 he enlisted into the 2nd Foot, and served some
-time with it at Gibraltar, where he had been much employed on the works
-in mining and blasting rock. After a service of seventeen and a half
-years in the 2nd regiment, he joined the company, then forming, on the
-26th June, 1772. The same day he was promoted to be sergeant. Having
-showed superior intelligence in the execution of his duties as a
-foreman, and distinguished himself by his diligence and gallantry during
-the siege, he was, in September, 1781, selected for the rank of
-sergeant-major. In the following year he suggested the formation of the
-galleries, and was honoured by being directed to conduct the work
-himself. This he continued to do until it was finished. As “overseer of
-the mines,” he had the executive charge of all blasting, mining, battery
-building, &c., at the fortress, and was found to be invaluable. He was
-active, prompt, and persevering, very short in stature, but wiry and
-hardy in constitution; was greatly esteemed by his officers, and
-frequently the subject of commendation from the highest authorities at
-Gibraltar. In February, 1787, when the Duke of Richmond was endeavouring
-to economize the ordnance expenditure at the Rock, the emoluments of
-sergeant-major Ince claimed his attention: but remembering his fair
-fame, his Grace thus wrote concerning him:— “I do not object to
-sergeant-major Henry Ince being continued as overseer of mines at 4_s._
-per day, as I understand, from all accounts, that he is a meritorious
-man, and that he distinguished himself during the siege; but, as such
-allowance, _in addition to his pay_, is very great, I desire it may not
-be considered as a precedent; and whoever succeeds him must only receive
-2_s._ 10_d._ per day, like the foremen in other branches, if he should
-be appointed a foreman.” In 1791, after a period of thirty-six years'
-active service, he was discharged from the company, but was still
-continued on the works as an overseer. On the 2nd February, 1796, he was
-commissioned as ensign in the Royal Garrison Battalion, and on the 24th
-March, 1801, was promoted to be lieutenant. In 1802 the regiment was
-disbanded. All this time, however, Ince was attached to the department
-as assistant-engineer; but at length, having worn himself out in the
-service of the fortress, he returned to Penzance, and died in June,
-1809, at the age of seventy-two.[40]
-
------
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- Ince had a farm at the top of the Rock, which is still called by his
- name. He had an only son, a clerk in the Commissariat department at
- Gibraltar, under Commissary-general Sweetlove, who, together with his
- wife, died in the fever of 1804, leaving an infant son, who was
- brought up by his grandmother. The eldest daughter of Lieutenant Ince
- was married at Gibraltar to Lieutenant R. Stapleton, of the 60th
- Rifles, who exchanged with Lieutenant Croker into the 13th Foot, and
- then sold out.
-
- One day Mr. Ince was trotting at an easy pace up the Rock, when the
- Duke of Kent, overtaking him, observed, “That horse, Mr. Ince, is too
- old for you.” “I like to ride easy, your Royal Highness,” was the
- subaltern’s meek reply. “Right, but you shall have another, more in
- keeping with your worth and your duties;” and soon afterwards the Duke
- presented him with a very valuable steed. The old overseer, however,
- was unable to manage the animal, and he rode again to the works on his
- own quiet nag. The Duke, meeting him soon after, inquired how it was
- he was not riding the new horse, when Ince replied, he was unable
- sufficiently to curb his spirit and tranquillize his pace. Ince then
- prayed his Royal Highness to honour his servant by receiving the noble
- creature into his stud again. “No, no, overseer,” rejoined the Duke;
- “if you can’t ride him easily, _put him into your pocket_!” The
- overseer readily understood his Royal Highness, and exchanged the
- beautiful steed for his worth in doubloons.
-
------
-
-Among the various stirring incidents narrated by Drinkwater, is the
-following, relative to the peculiar advantage of the boys of the
-soldier-artificer company during the siege.
-
-“In the course of the day,” 25th March, 1782, “ a shot came through one
-of the capped embrasures on Princess Amelia’s Battery (Willis’s), took
-off the legs of two men belonging to the 72nd and 73rd regiments, one
-leg of a soldier of the 73rd, and wounded another man in both legs; thus
-four men had seven legs taken off and wounded by one shot. The boy, who
-was usually stationed on the works where a large party was employed to
-inform the men when the enemy’s fire was directed to that place, had
-been reproving them for their carelessness in not attending to him, and
-had just turned his head toward the enemy, when he observed this shot,
-and instantly called for them to take care; his caution was, however,
-too late; the shot entered the embrasure, and had the above-recited
-fatal effect. It is somewhat singular that this boy should be possessed
-of such uncommon quickness of sight as to see the enemy’s shot almost
-immediately after they quitted the guns. He was not, however, the only
-one in the garrison possessing this qualification; another boy, of about
-the same age, was as celebrated, if not his superior. Both of them
-belonged to the artificer company, and were constantly placed on some
-part of the works to observe the enemy’s fire; their names were Richmond
-(not Richardson, as stated by Drinkwater) and Brand; the former was
-reported to have the best eye.”[41] Joseph Parsons,[42] another youth of
-the company, was also employed as a _looker-out_ on the works; and
-though his name has escaped the notice of the historian, he was
-nevertheless no less efficient.
-
------
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- ‘Drinkwater.’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 108.
-
------
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Parsons joined the company in February, 1779, and was discharged, as a
- private artificer, 1st January, 1809, on 1_s._ 4_d._ a-day.
-
-It was an object that every one in the fortress should be rendered
-useful in some way or other, and the boys of the company—out of
-sympathy for their youth—were, for some time after the commencement of
-the siege employed on the works at Europa quarry, then but little
-annoyed by the enemy’s fire. At length, inured to labour, and taught
-by events to expect danger, it was considered of greater advantage to
-occupy their time at the different batteries; and on the 15th
-February, 1782, the Chief Engineer directed their removal to the works
-and fortifications,[43] with the view of looking out for the enemy’s
-projectiles, and giving warning of their approach. On the 21st June
-following, such of the boys as were masons in the company were engaged
-under Mr. Hutchinson, a civil foreman, in rounding stones, agreeably
-to the instructions of Major Lewis of the artillery. These stones,
-according to Drinkwater, were “cut to fit the calibre of a 13-inch
-mortar, with a hole drilled in the centre, which being filled with a
-sufficient quantity of powder, were fired with a short fuse to burst
-over the enemy’s works.” It was an unusual mode of annoyance, and for
-its novelty was employed for some time; but not effecting the damage
-that was desired, it was ultimately laid aside.[44] On the failure of
-this experiment, the boys returned to the perilous posts assigned to
-them on the batteries to look out. At this duty they continued as long
-as the siege lasted, and doubtless, by their vigilance in its
-execution, they were the means of saving many valuable lives, or
-otherwise preventing casualty.
-
------
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- Order Book—Chief Engineer’s.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- ‘Order-Book’ (Chief Engineer’s) of 21st June, 1782; and ‘Drinkwater,’
- Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 118.
-
------
-
-Of the two boys who have been so favourably noticed by Drinkwater, it
-may not be unacceptable to devote a small space here to their brief but
-honourable history. Their names were Thomas Richmond[45] and John Brand;
-the former was known at the Rock by the familiar sobriquet of _shell_,
-being the better looker-out; and the latter by the name of _shot_.
-Richmond was trained as a carpenter; Brand as a mason. Their fathers
-were sergeants in the company.[46] Richmond’s was killed at the siege.
-As might be expected, the beneficial services of these boys at the
-batteries acquired for them no common celebrity and esteem.
-
------
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Not Richardson, as Drinkwater has it, p. 108.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- Brand’s father, a mason by trade and a Perthshire man, was the first
- artificer enrolled in the company.
-
------
-
-The siege being over, the youths were sent to Mr. Geddes’s school, at
-that time the principal seminary at Gibraltar. This gentleman paid every
-attention to their instruction and improvement, and, as a consequence,
-they progressed rapidly in their studies. Being found quick,
-intelligent, and ingenious, some officers of the company patronized
-them, and placed them in the drawing-room under their own eye, with the
-view of making them competent to fill better situations. Brand in time
-became corporal, and Richmond lance-corporal, which ranks they held on
-the 8th May, 1789, when they were discharged from the corps, and
-appointed by the Commander-in-Chief assistant-draughtsmen.[47]
-
------
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- ‘Order-Book’ (Chief Engineer’s), 8th May, 1789.
-
------
-
-Having made considerable proficiency in their trades, they were employed
-for some years previous to their discharge as modellers, which art they
-continued to follow with great tact, skill, and perseverance, until they
-quitted the fortress. After several trial models of various subjects,
-these young men commenced the gigantic task of modelling Gibraltar, at
-which they worked with unwearied application for nearly three years.
-Succeeding so well in this their first great and public undertaking,
-Brand[48] was directed to make a model in polished stone of the King’s
-Bastion, and Richmond[49] a model of the north front of Gibraltar.
-Nearly the whole of the years 1790 and 1791 were spent in perfecting
-them; and for these noble specimens of art they were favoured with the
-flattering congratulations of the highest authorities at the fortress.
-The better to exemplify the appreciation entertained of the models, and
-of the merits and talents of the modellers, they were recommended to the
-Duke of Richmond for commissions. His Grace immediately ordered them to
-proceed to Woolwich, to undergo some slight preparatory training. That
-training was short—a few months sufficed, and then they were honoured
-with appointments as second lieutenants in the royal engineers. Their
-commissions were dated 17th January, 1793.[50] Soon the young
-subalterns, rich in intelligence and full of promise, were sent abroad;
-but before the close of the year, both fell a prey to the prevailing
-yellow fever in the West Indies.[51]
-
------
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- Assisted by sergeant James Shirres, an ingenious artizan and modeller.
- This non-commissioned officer, after serving at the capture of
- Minorca, was made a sergeant-major of the company that served there,
- 2nd May, 1800, and on the 31st December, 1804, was appointed overseer
- in the royal engineer department at Plymouth.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- Assisted by Antonio Marques, a Minorcaen artificer.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 13,494. 15 to 19 January, 1793.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- The education of these youths is highly creditable to the officers of
- engineers. Many similar instances of boys in the corps acquiring
- distinction by their talents, have subsequently occurred, the honour
- of which, in great measure, is due to the officers. Assistance and
- encouragement they never fail to give in cases where their efforts are
- likely to meet with success, and numbers have thus qualified
- themselves to fill important situations with efficiency and credit, in
- their own profession, and afterwards in civil life. Richmond and
- Brand, however, are the only instances in which commissions have been
- given from the ranks of the artificers, or sappers and miners, into
- the corps of engineers.
-
------
-
-The three models alluded to were brought to England in 1793 by desire of
-General O’Hara. The large model of the entire Rock was deposited in the
-museum in the Royal Arsenal, and the other two were presented to His
-Majesty George III. Private Joseph Bethell had charge of the first
-model,[52] and Private Thomas Hague[53] of the other two. The large
-model, from being lodged in a public place open to visitors, was well
-known. It was an object of considerable attraction, “and was much
-admired,” so Drinkwater writes, “for beauty of execution and minute
-correctness.”[54] A visitor to the Arsenal in those days corroborates
-the just encomium of the historian, and thus records his impressions:—
-
-“I walked yesterday morning to Woolwich Warren, that immense repository
-of military arts, the _palladium_ of our empire, where one wonder
-succeeds another so rapidly, that the mind of a visitor is kept in a
-continual gaze of admiration. Should I be asked what has made the
-strongest impression on mine, it is a magnificent view of the rock of
-Gibraltar, which was made there, formed of the very rock itself, on a
-scale of twenty-five feet to an inch, and presents a most perfect view
-of it in every point of perspective.”[55]
-
------
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- Drinkwater says (p. 108), “that one of the works of these young men,
- while pursuing their studies at Woolwich, was to finish the large
- model of the rock of Gibraltar.” The historian has certainly been
- misled here: the model was finished before it left the fortress, and
- did not reach the Arsenal until after its makers had been
- commissioned, and left England for the West Indies. The placement and
- adjustment of its several parts were intrusted to a military artificer
- named Bethell. He was to have been assisted by another private, who
- accompanied him for the purpose, from Gibraltar; but having broken his
- leg at Woolwich, his services were thus lost. Private John McNaughton,
- a carpenter of the Woolwich company, was put to the model in his
- place. I knew McNaughton well, and he assured me that the model was
- not touched by any hands but his own and Bethell’s, and that on no
- occasion were the modellers present during its fixation. McNaughton
- seems to have been an excellent artificer, and always an active
- soldier. During the mutiny of Parker, he was employed in repairing
- Tilbury Fort, and in erecting temporary defences below Gravesend. He
- afterwards served under the great Abercrombie in Egypt; next was
- employed in constructing the towers on the Sussex coast, at the time
- of the projected invasion of Napoleon; and, lastly, was many years in
- Newfoundland. He was discharged 24th January, 1815, on 1_s._ 4_d._
- a-day, and died at Woolwich in April, 1853, aged 84.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- Hague was a tall, intelligent mechanic, a fine modeller, and a smart
- soldier. On account of these qualities, he was selected to take charge
- of the models for George III. Having put them together on their tables
- at Buckingham Palace, His Majesty, the Queen, and royal family, with
- other illustrious personages of the court, came to see them. Hague was
- cited before them to explain the model, and to point out the defences
- which, from their prominence in the late siege, had acquired historic
- identity. His observations were listened to with attention, and His
- Majesty awarded him a gratifying proof of his royal approbation. Soon
- afterwards Hague returned to Gibraltar, and on the 31st March, 1815,
- was discharged and pensioned at 1_s._ 8_d._ a-day. He was subsequently
- employed as a modeller in the grand store; was married in 1827; and
- died at the Rock about 1833, upwards of 100 years old.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- ‘Drinkwater.’ Murray’s edit., 1846, p. 108.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- To this the visitor adds a description of the model, which is adjoined
- here, on account of the model itself having long since been destroyed.
- “First then,” says the writer, “are the Spanish lines; then the
- perpendicular rock, rising bold from the neck of the neutral ground,
- which is not many feet above high-water mark. On the east, or left
- hand, is the Mediterranean Sea; and on the west, within the mole or
- pier, is the Bay of Gibraltar, in which the largest ships in the
- British Navy may ride safe. The garrison, town, and forts, are to the
- westward, whence the rock rises with a more gradual acclivity to the
- summit,—the east side of which is also perpendicular, and inhabited by
- monkeys. On the highest point is the Levant Battery, which is nearly
- three times and one half the height of St. Paul’s church, or 1375 feet
- above the level of the sea. The southern extremity of the model of
- this rock towards Europa Point, being too large for the room, and less
- important, is cut off. This description ought to fill a
- volume.”—Gentleman’s Magazine, part 2, 1798, p.648.
-
------
-
-Nine years after its placement, the museum in the arsenal was fired by
-an incendiary, and this celebrated model was unfortunately
-destroyed.[56] The other two models, which held a place in Buckingham
-Palace for about twenty-seven years, were presented in 1820 by George
-IV. to the Royal Military Repository at Woolwich. They are now daily
-exhibited in the Rotunda, and are, perhaps, about the best specimens of
-workmanship and ingenuity in the place. That of the King’s Bastion is
-finely wrought, and is really beautiful; that of the north front, bold
-and masterly. Both claim the particular attention of visitors, exciting
-at once their surprise and admiration.
-
------
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- This was on the 22nd May, 1802. The account given at the time of this
- disgraceful act is as follows:—“A dreadful fire broke out at Woolwich,
- and from the investigation which has taken place into this calamitous
- circumstance, there is but too much reason to believe that this
- disaster was not the mere effect of accident. The fire broke out, at
- one and the same time, in three different places, besides which a
- great mass of combustible materials have been discovered. The loss to
- Government will be immense. The damage done to the Model-room is
- particularly to be lamented, as several choice works of art have been
- destroyed, without the power of reparation; however, the injury done
- to the beautiful model of the rock of Gibraltar is not so great as was
- at first represented, it having sustained but a slight damage, which
- can be easily repaired, and the whole restored to its original
- state.”—Dodsley’s Annual Register, 1802, p. 404. The journalist is
- wrong in his remarks concerning the state of the model after the fire.
- It was completely destroyed, and not even the fragments are now in
- existence. Some persons, indeed, with whom I have conversed, bear out
- the chronicler in his record, and affirm that the model was repaired,
- and _is now_ in the Rotunda; but they have given me a fair inference
- of the mistaken character of their recollections, by uniformly
- referring to the model of the _north front_, executed by Richmond and
- Marques, which, at the very time that the fire occurred, formed one of
- the curiosities of Buckingham Palace. Drinkwater (p. 108, Murray’s
- edit.) attests the fact of its destruction; and in this he is borne
- out by the ‘Repository Detail of Arms,’ &c., printed in 1822. In that
- catalogue (at p. 9-21) is a list of the arms, models, &c., of the
- _original_ institution preserved from the fire of 1802, and collected
- by Sir William Congreve, but no mention is made of the model in
- question. This, then, is the best attainable evidence of the certainty
- of its demolition, coupled with the acknowledgment, at page 52 of the
- same catalogue, that the “North end of Gibraltar,” the model mistaken
- for the one destroyed in the Arsenal, was presented to the Repository
- by George IV. Had the large model of the Rock been preserved, Sir
- William Congreve would most certainly have noted it in the detail.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1783.
-
-State of the fortress—Execution of the works depended upon
- the company—Casualties filled up by transfers from the
- line—Composition—Recruiting—Relieved from all duties, garrison and
- regimental—Anniversary of the destruction of the Spanish battering
- flotilla.
-
-
-For about six months previously to the termination of hostilities, the
-siege had been carried on with fearful vigour, and the destruction it
-occasioned, revealed to a mournful extent the efficiency of the enemy’s
-cannonade. The tiers of batteries on the north front, the whole of the
-fortifications along the sea face, and indeed every work of a permanent
-character, were considerably damaged or thrown down. The town too was
-little better than a vast ruin, and its houses were levelled to the
-rock, or were left standing in tottering fragments, or at best in their
-shells, despoiled and untenanted, as so many monuments of an unbounded
-calamity. The inhabitants, driven shelterless into the streets, were
-compelled either to leave the fortress, or to locate themselves under
-canvas amid the general desolation; or to seek a comfortless retreat in
-the dark and gloomy caverns of the rock. Such was the wreck to which
-Gibraltar was reduced at the close of the siege, and the work of
-restoration, therefore, was both extensive and pressing.
-
-The reconstruction or repair of the fortifications and other public
-works at the fortress, in great part depended upon the company; and the
-more so, since the numbers of the line competent to work as tradesmen
-were inconsiderable. Assistance from the civil population of the place
-was neither given nor expected, as the works in the town secured to them
-abundance of employment and excellent wages. Policy, therefore, dictated
-the expediency of paying particular regard both to the numerical and
-physical efficiency of the company.
-
-At the close of the siege, there were twenty-nine rank and file wanting
-to complete the soldier-artificers, which number was increased to
-thirty-nine by the end of May. To supply this deficiency, the Governor
-ordered the transfer of an equal number of artificers from regiments in
-the garrison; and on the 31st July, the company was complete. Still,
-there were many of the men who, from wounds received at the siege, or
-from privation and hardship, or from exposure in camp, in summer, to the
-excessive heat of the sun, and in the autumn, to the heavy rains, were
-unequal to the exertion required from them on the works. Among them were
-the best masons and carpenters of the company, who were stated to have
-been “expended” during the siege. Accordingly, on the 31st of August,
-sixty-seven men, good “old servants, and those that had lost the use of
-their limbs in the service,” were discharged and “recommended,” whose
-vacancies were at once filled up by volunteers from the line.
-
-After this desirable pruning, the composition of the company stood as
-under:—
-
- 1 Sergeant-major.
- 10 Sergeants.
- 10 Corporals.
- 4 Drummers.
- 38 Masons.
- 33 Smiths.
- 54 Carpenters.
- 21 Sawyers.
- 32 Miners.
- 6 Wheelers.
- 5 File-cutters.
- 4 Nailors.
- 3 Gardeners.
- 7 Lime-burners.
- 3 Coopers.
- 1 Painter.
- 1 Collar-maker.
- 1 Brazier.
- ___
- Total 234
-
-As far as circumstances permitted, the strength of the company was never
-allowed to sink beneath its establishment, for whenever a casualty
-occurred, it was immediately filled up. Not only was the Chief Engineer
-anxious on this point, but the Governor and Lieut.-Governor felt equal
-concern, and were ready to give effect to any measure which should yield
-the required result. If, at Gibraltar, the recruiting failed from the
-want of the proper classes of mechanics to join the company, the Duke of
-Richmond found means in England and Scotland to meet the case. His Grace
-was both an admirer and an advocate of the military system of carrying
-on the works, and took peculiar interest in the recruiting, even to
-superintending the service, and acting in some cases as the recruiting
-sergeant. Hence the company, seldom short of its complement of men,
-invariably afforded a force of more than 220 non-commissioned officers
-and artificers to be employed constantly in restoring the
-fortifications, &c.: the sick at this period averaged about eight a day.
-
-To obtain the full benefit of their services, and to expedite the works,
-the soldier-artificers were excused from all garrison routine—as well as
-from their own regimental guards and fatigues—and freed from all
-interferences likely to interrupt them in the performance of their
-working duties. Even the cleaning of their rooms, the care of their arms
-and accoutrements, and the cooking of their messes, were attended to by
-soldiers of the line. Every encouragement was thus given to the company
-to work well and assiduously, and every liberty that could possibly be
-conceded, not excepting a partial abandonment of discipline, was granted
-to them. Nevertheless, to impress them with the recollection that their
-civil employments and privileges did not make them any the less
-soldiers, they were paraded generally under arms, on the Sunday; and to
-heighten the effect of their military appearance, wore accoutrements
-which had belonged to a disbanded Newfoundland regiment, purchased for
-them at the economical outlay of 7_s._ a set. Perhaps no body of men
-subject to the articles of war were ever permitted to live and work
-under a milder surveillance; and it might be added, that none could have
-rendered services more in keeping with the indulgences bestowed. They
-did their duty with zeal, and the works progressed to the satisfaction
-of the engineers and the authorities.
-
-The remembrance of the late siege was not likely soon to be effaced from
-the memory of those who participated in it; and hence the company,
-regarding themselves in a peculiar sense as the fencibles of the
-fortress, and as having contributed largely to its defence, commemorated
-the event by means of a ball and supper. The festival was held at the
-“Three Anchors Inn,” on the 13th of September—the anniversary of the
-destruction of the battering flotilla—on which occasion Lord Heathfield,
-and Sir Robert Boyd, the Lieutenant-Governor, with their respective
-staff-officers, dined with the company, and retired after drinking one
-or two complimentary toasts in praise of their gallantry at the siege,
-and their useful services on the fortifications and works.[57]
-
------
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- This anniversary supper was held by the non-commissioned officers
- annually, on the date named, at the _Three Anchors_. After the first
- year, the tickets of admission were 16_s._ 6_d._ each, or 5 dollars
- and 4 reals, which provided, in the language of one who used to have a
- seat at the table, “a sumptuous entertainment.” At that time the
- dollar was 3_s._, and the real 4½_d._ Each ticket admitted a married
- non-commissioned officer and his family, or a single one and his
- friend. The privates took no part in the celebration. On each
- occasion, the Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, &c., honoured the company
- with their presence, and made gratifying allusions to their services
- at the siege. The night of the festival used to be familiarly termed
- _Junk-ship night_, both by the inhabitants and the soldiers. The
- custom was perpetuated till the year 1804, when, from the fearful
- epidemic that prevailed, it was necessarily omitted, and was never
- again held. It was a common opinion that the Duke of Kent interdicted
- these loyal anniversaries, but such was not the case. The last one was
- held in September, 1803, after his Royal Highness had been recalled
- from Gibraltar.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1786-1787.
-
-Company divided into two—Numerous discharges—Cause of the men becoming
- so soon ineffective—Fourth augmentation—Labourers—Recruiting
- reinforcements—Dismissal of foreign artificers—Wreck of brig
- ‘Mercury’—Uniform dress—Working ditto—Names of
- officers—Privileges—Cave under the signal house.
-
-
-On the 30th June the Duke of Richmond divided the company into two,
-owing to the professional duties of the Chief Engineer rendering it
-impracticable for him to pay proper attention to the discipline and
-interior management of so large a body. The two senior officers at the
-fortress were appointed to take immediate charge of these companies, and
-each was authorized to receive an allowance of 56_l._ 10_s._ per annum
-in lieu of all charges for repair of arms, &c.[58] The Chief Engineer,
-nevertheless, continued in command of both companies. In the estimates,
-however, annually presented to Parliament, the corps was not recognized
-as being formed into two companies, possibly with a view to prevent the
-members of the House of Commons being drawn into a profitless debate
-upon a fancied attempt to increase the corps; a debate which, very
-likely, would not have been productive of compliments to his Grace, as
-by his extensive but lately rejected schemes for national defence he had
-made himself in some respects obnoxious to the House and to the country.
-
------
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- This sum seems to be a sort of standing equivalent, and has existed
- without alteration, through all the changes of advanced or reduced
- prices in material and labour, to the present day.
-
------
-
-By this time there were many men in the corps, who from length of
-service and other causes were no longer fit for the duties of the
-department; and there were others, also, who from continued misconduct
-were worthless and burdensome. Captain Evelegh, returning to England
-about this period, lost no time in making the Duke of Richmond
-acquainted with the state of the companies, and of advising the
-discharge of all who were inadequate to their pay. His Grace at once
-acquiesced, and the companies being well weeded, eighty-two men were
-discharged during the winter and ensuing spring.
-
-In so young a corps, scarcely fourteen years embodied, it might occasion
-some surprise why so many men became ineffective in so short a time. The
-reason is obvious. At all periods since the formation of the corps, the
-demands for mechanics of good qualification were urgent. Under thirty
-years of age men could seldom be had from the line, whose services were
-worth acceptance, being either irregular in conduct, or possessing but
-little pretension to ability as tradesmen. Mechanics were therefore
-generally received at thirty-five to forty-five, and oftentimes at the
-bald age of fifty. Neither age nor height was an insuperable
-disqualification, provided the candidate for transfer or enlistment
-possessed sufficient stamina for a few years' hard wear and tear. It was
-not therefore to be expected that they could serve long in the
-companies, more especially, as, the works of the fortress being always
-important and pressing, the men were obliged to labour zealously to meet
-the exigency, exposed to all the fitful and depressing changes of wind
-and temperature.
-
-In the course of the interview with the Duke of Richmond, Captain
-Evelegh proposed that an augmentation of 41 labourers should be made to
-the companies. Of the necessity for this his Grace was not so well
-persuaded, for knowing the ready disposition of the Governor of
-Gibraltar to provide men, at all times, for the services of the works,
-he felt assured that no difficulty would be found in obtaining any
-number required from the line, on a proper representation of their need
-being made. He would not therefore sanction the measure; but, as his
-Grace was aware, from the extent of the works in progress, that the
-demand for mechanics was very great, and as he was moreover much averse
-to the employment of civil artificers, he considered it would be a far
-greater public benefit to increase the corps with mechanics than
-labourers. He therefore, in September, took upon himself the
-responsibility of augmenting the companies with forty-one masons and
-bricklayers, which fixed the strength of the corps as under:—
-
- 1 Sergeant-major.
- 10 Sergeants.
- 10 Corporals.
- 4 Drummers.
- 250 Private artificers.
- ——
- Total 275
-
-Each company was to consist of 137 non-commissioned officers and men.
-
-His Grace, moreover, ordered that such of the artificers as were not
-sufficiently skilful at their trades, to the number of forty, were to be
-employed as labourers, if required, but he did not contemplate that any
-such could be found in the corps. From this slight innovation, however,
-soon after followed the authorized enlistment of _labourers_ as a part
-of the establishment,—a measure not in any sense welcomed by the old
-artificers, who conceived they were losing caste and position by the
-association.
-
-Means for obtaining transfers and recruits at Gibraltar were now
-considerably straitened. The Duke of Richmond, therefore, undertook to
-furnish the number authorized to be added to the corps, and to supply
-the constantly-recurring casualties. Upon this duty his Grace employed
-several officers of engineers in the manufacturing districts of England
-and Scotland. Captain Rudyerd was the chief recruiting officer in North
-Britain, and he seems to have been the most successful in obtaining
-recruits. Married men[59] with families were not debarred from
-enlistment, if their personal appearance and talents as tradesmen were
-favourable. More attention was now paid to age than heretofore; and none
-were received over thirty-five years old, unless under extraordinary
-circumstances. The bounty allowed to each candidate was 13_l._ 13_s._
-6_d._
-
------
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- The regulation with regard to the wives and families of recruits going
- to Gibraltar, as established by the Duke of Richmond, is sufficiently
- curious, by comparison with the present very limited system, to be
- mentioned here. On the 9th September, 1786, the Duke arranged that to
- every 20 men, 10 women and 10 children should be allowed to accompany
- them. If there were more than that number with the party, lots were to
- be drawn, and those who did not gain prizes were to find their own
- passages; the lots were not to divide families, but were to be drawn
- by the men until the number allowed was completed. If encouragement
- had been given to any men to hope that their families would be
- provided with passages, the bargain was to be faithfully adhered to.
-
------
-
-Five batches[60] of recruits, numbering in the whole 183 artificers,
-were sent to the Rock in rapid succession; but as they were long in
-arriving, it was considered expedient to hire civil artificers from
-Portugal and Italy to expedite the works. However desirable it might
-have been to adopt this course, the Duke of Richmond disapproved of it.
-He had always a great aversion to the engagement of civil artificers,
-whether from England or from places on the Continent, arising from the
-great expense attending their employment and their general irregular
-conduct. His Grace, therefore, ordered that the foreign artificers
-should be discharged on the arrival of the recruits, which was
-accordingly done.
-
------
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Of the following strength:—
-
- 21 men 15th Sept. 1786, embarked on board the 'New
- Euphrates,' and landed 6th Oct.
- 58 ” 21st Sept, 1786, embarked at Leith, on board the
- brig ‘Mercury.’ Wrecked 24th Sept.
- 25 ” 6th Nov. 1786, embarked in the ‘Adventure;’
- landed.
- 35 ” 23rd Mar. 1787; landed.
- 44 ” 15th and 16 Apr. 1787; landed.
- ——
- Total 183 ” About 100 of this number were bricklayers and
- masons, the crafts most required at the Rock.
- ===
-
------
-
-Of the second party of recruits, it may be permitted to take a more than
-passing notice. It was composed of 58 men, all mechanics, “in the prime
-of life,” under charge of sergeant Sherriff, accompanied by their wives,
-28 in number, and 12 children—in all 101 persons. They embarked at Leith
-on the 21st September, on board the brig ‘Mercury,’ Thomas Davidson,
-master. The crew consisted of 11 men. The ship sailed with a fair wind;
-but on the 23rd, when nearing the coast of Flanders, she was greatly
-buffeted by a boisterous gale. At three o’clock on the morning of the
-24th, Sunday, the steeple of Ostend was recognised, and, accordingly,
-the course of the vessel was shaped towards the chops of the channel. A
-storm now set in, and as danger was apprehended, the captain and crew
-were anxious and vigilant. Skill and exertion, however, were of no
-avail, for at seven o’clock in the evening she struck upon a sand-bank,
-about six miles off Dunkirk. The wind continued blowing hard to the
-north, while the sea, “running mountains high,” dashed the frail bark to
-and fro with a fury that broke her masts, destroyed her bulwarks, and
-tore her sails to shreds. At nine o’clock she went to pieces, and
-melancholy to add, all on board perished but three. The survivors were
-John Patterson, ship’s carpenter; Walter Montgomery, blacksmith; and
-Daniel Thomson, mason. The two latter were recruits. On fragments of the
-wreck they floated all night, and at ten o’clock next morning, Patterson
-and Montgomery, just ready to relinquish their hold from cold and
-exhaustion, were picked up by a pilot-boat and taken on shore at
-Dunkirk. The other sufferer, Thomson, was found some hours after in the
-surge, helpless and shivering, clinging to a spar. At once he was
-conveyed to Mardyck, three miles to the westward of Dunkirk, where he
-only lived a few days. Of Walter Montgomery nothing further is known. As
-at the time he was reported to be very ill, and not likely to recover,
-he probably died at the place where he was given an asylum.[61]
-
------
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- ‘Morning Chronicle,’ 10th October, 1786, and periodical press
- generally. In most of the papers Daniel Thomson is, by mistake, named
- Daniel Campbell.
-
- _Fifteen_ bodies were washed ashore between Nieuport and Ostend, on
- the 27th and 28th September, and it is not a little remarkable that,
- of this small number, no less than _fourteen_ should have been those
- of women.—‘General Advertiser.’ ‘Public Advertiser,’ 9th October,
- 1786.
-
------
-
-No information can be obtained relative to the dress of the companies
-until 1786.[62] _Then_, the uniform was a plain red coat,
-double-breasted, with two rows of large flat brass buttons down the
-front, placed at equal distances of two inches apart. The buttons were
-one inch and a quarter in diameter, and bore the Ordnance device of
-three guns and three balls. The left breast buttoned over the right at
-the pit of the chest, from which upwards the coat turned back in the
-form of lappels. The cuffs and collar were orange-yellow, laced round
-with narrow red ferreting. The collar was turned over like the common
-roll collar, and was ornamented with a red rectangular loop at each
-side. Down the front of the coat to the end of the skirts, narrow yellow
-ferreting was sewn, as well as upon the inside edges of the skirts,
-which were very broad, descending to the leggings, and were buttoned
-back at the bottom to show the white shalloon lining. Small plaited
-frills about five inches long, were worn at the breast, to the right;
-and full ruffles at the wrists. Over the black leather stock, a white
-false collar fell down about an inch. The waistcoat was white cloth,
-bound with yellow ferreting, and came well down over the abdomen. At the
-bottom, it was cut so that the angle or corner of each front separated
-about seven inches. The pocket-holes were slashed; each slash was two
-inches deep, and bound round. The buttons were small and flat, similar
-in device to the coat-buttons. The breeches were white, of a texture
-like kerseymere, and secured below the knee with three small buttons.
-The leggings were black cloth, reaching to the knee and strapped under
-the shoe; they buttoned on the outside, and were fastened to a small
-button above the calf of the leg. The buttons were like those worn on
-the waistcoat. The hat was cocked, the same as that commonly worn; the
-cock was in the front, directly over the nose, with a cockade to the
-right of it supporting a black feather. In other respects it was quite
-plain. The arms and accoutrements consisted of white leather
-cross-belts, black cartouch-box with frog, and musket and bayonet.[63]
-The breast-plate was oval, bearing the Ordnance device: above the balls
-was the word GIBRALTAR; below the guns SOLDIER-ARTIFICERS. The sergeants
-had swords, silver-mounted, with a plain guard of one bar only; tassel,
-white leather. The distinctions with regard to ranks were as follows:
-the sergeants had clothing of a superior fabric; their breeches and
-waistcoats were kerseymere; the lace on their coats was gold; they also
-wore a crimson sash with tassels, under their coats, and laced
-shoulder-straps. All the other ranks wore linen or cotton ferreting; but
-the corporals had gold fringed shoulder-knots, and the lance corporals
-one gold knot on the right shoulder.[64] (Plate I.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- I have been informed that previously to 1786, the coat was somewhat
- similar in colour, cut, and ornament to that shown in Plate I., but
- that the breeches were blue instead of white. The black leggings were
- banded above the knee. The working dress consisted of a long duck
- frock, and mosquito trowsers with gaiters attached. Everything was
- white even to the felt round hat, which at this period had the
- military symbols of a yellow band and yellow edge to the brim. Serge
- pantaloons were worn in winter.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- The sergeant-major and sergeants were armed with carbines and
- bayonets.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- This novel way of distinguishing the non-commissioned officers led to
- frequent misconception and mistake in the garrison. When dressed with
- the bayonet belt only, strangers regarded the corporals as the highest
- rank, and lance-corporals the next. Sometimes when taking an excursion
- into Spain, sentries have presented arms to them, and guards even have
- turned out to pay the compliment due to field officers! This military
- blunder continued, with greater or less observance, until the adoption
- of chevrons, about 1805.
-
------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ‘SOLDIER Plate II.
- ARTIFICER Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The working-dress was a plain long red jacket in winter, and a linen one
-in summer, with a single row of large brass buttons, wide apart, down
-the front. It descended to the hips, opened from the chest upwards to
-show the shirt, and from that point downwards to show the waistcoat.
-Convenient to the hand on each side was a huge pocket covered with a
-broad slash. The collar and cuffs were of yellow cloth, the former
-turned over or rolled, and at the small of the back were two large
-buttons. Under the jacket a waistcoat was worn—in summer linen, in
-winter flannel—of the same cut as the regimental one, but not laced or
-ferreted. Similar in material were the pantaloons; and to these were
-attached a pair of black gaiters, of linen or cloth, corresponding with
-the season. They reached a little above the ankle, and buttoned on the
-outside. No particular regard was paid to the neck covering. Stocks of
-leather, or velvet, or silk, or black handkerchiefs, were
-indiscriminately used. A white hat completed the suit. It was about six
-inches high, had a straight pole with yellow band of an inch in width,
-and a broad brim edged with yellow tape or ferreting. Plate II. The
-description of working-dress worn by the non-commissioned officers has
-not been ascertained, nor can any record be discovered of the precise
-uniform dress adopted for the drummers, or of the peculiar badge that
-distinguished the sergeant-major from other sergeants.
-
-The only complete record that has turned up to research, showing the
-names of the officers who were attached to the companies since the year
-1772, is a return for 1787, by which it seems the following officers did
-duty with them:—
-
- Captain Robert Pringle, chief engineer.
- Captain William Campbell Skinner, died 24th April, 1787.
- First Lieutenant, Thomas Skinner.
- First Lieutenant, William Kerstiman. Joined 25th May, 1787.
- Second Lieutenant, Thomas Smart.
- Second Lieutenant, Samuel T. Dickens.
- Draughtsman, James Evans.[65]
-
------
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- These officers were also present with the corps in 1788; but after
- that year until 1797 no record has been discovered.
-
------
-
-About this time, it appearing to be of some consequence to cut and form
-a ditch immediately under the Crillon Battery, situated on the south
-flank of the King’s, Prince’s, and Queen’s Lines, a strong party was set
-to work by order of the Chief Engineer. They executed their laborious
-task in a comparatively short period, which elicited the warmest praises
-of General O’Hara. To mark his sense of their services, however, in a
-form more gratifying than words, he gave permission to the companies to
-pass to the neutral ground, and out of garrison, on Sundays and all
-holidays without a written pass, or restraint of any kind. With this
-privilege was also conceded the liberty to appear on such occasions in
-whatever apparel their fancy suggested, except in their uniform coats.
-It was not uncommon, therefore, for the non-commissioned officers and
-the respectable portion of the privates, to stroll about the garrison or
-ramble into Spain, dressed in black silk or satin breeches, white silk
-stockings, and silver knee or shoe-buckles, drab beaver hats, and
-scarlet jackets, tastefully trimmed with white kerseymere.
-
-Governor O’Hara was a constant visitor at the works, and took much
-interest in their progress. Even as early as the morning gun-fire, he
-was perambulating the fortifications and batteries, and worming his way
-among the mechanics. Almost to the last man, he could call each by name,
-and knew the best artificers too well ever to forget them. Familiar with
-their zeal and exertions, he regretted sometimes to find that a few men
-were absent from the works undergoing sentences of confinement to the
-barracks. This induced the General to relax a little in strictness
-towards the companies. None of the men would he suffer to be punished
-for intoxication, or other slight offences committed when off duty or on
-the works, in order that he might have them all employed. This
-slackening the reins would, no doubt, be looked upon now-a-days as a
-monstrous and culpable dereliction, however plausible might be the
-object intended to be gained by it. To justify or condemn the act is
-obviously out of place here. It is simply mentioned as a fact; and while
-it remains a singularity in military jurisprudence, the main point that
-originated it must not be overlooked, viz., the estimation in which the
-Governor held the corps for their services in the restoration or
-improvement of the works of the fortress.[66]
-
------
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- This laxity of discipline seems, in time, to have become general among
- the troops at the fortress, and the extent to which it was carried
- both by officers and men was little short of disgraceful.—‘Wilkie’s
- British Colonies considered as Military Posts,’ in ‘United Service
- Journal,’ 2, 1840, p, 379.
-
------
-
-In enlarging the works of the garrison, the military artificers
-frequently opened up cavities in the promontory which were mostly of
-sufficient interest to excite the curiosity of geologists; but one
-discovered in 1789, by some miners of the corps, while scarping the back
-of the Rock, attracted, at the time, unusual attention. It was situated
-about 160 feet from the foot of the cliff, on its eastern side, nearly
-under the Signal House, and its extent classed it among some of the
-largest within the area of the fortress. Removing the rank vegetation
-which had overgrown its mouth, a small chasm was bared, opening into a
-cave containing several chambers and grottoes, entered by narrow
-funnel-shaped crevices, some so low and winding that ingress could only
-be obtained by crawling through the long misty passages on all-fours.
-Seemingly, the roofs were supported by a number of pillars, which the
-dripping of ages had congealed into all shapes and sizes and into all
-degrees of hardness, from patches of soft silvered powder to the bold
-indurated columnar stalactite. On the floors, at different heights, were
-stalagmites, some peering up like needles, and others, swollen and
-grotesque, rose from frothlike cushions of delicate finish, which, “on
-being rudely touched, dissolved instantly into water.” The hall at the
-extremity was divided into two oblong recesses, floored by a “deep layer
-of vegetable earth,” where not a clump of the lowliest weed or a blade
-of grass was seen to show that vigour was in the earth.[67] Nothing
-seemed capable of living there but a colony of bats, some flapping about
-on lazy wing, and others torpid; no process to be active, but the cold
-one of petrifaction, which, in nature’s own confused method, had
-elaborated throughout the cavern, columns and pinnacles and cushions,
-puffs and concretions, some as fleecy as snow, others as crisp as
-hoar-frost, and others of an opal hue as transparent as crystal. All was
-rich, beautiful, and sparkling. It was a marvel to adventurers, but
-unfit for habitation; yet, in later years, this hole of the mountain was
-possessed by a Spanish goat-herd, who reached his solitude by the same
-threadlike but dangerous tracks as his goats. There might the recluse
-have lived till his bones fell among the petrifactions, but he was at
-length expelled from its gloomy precincts on account of his contraband
-iniquities.
-
------
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- Martin’s British Colonies, 1835, p. 51-53.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1779-1788.
-
-Colonel Debbieg’s proposal for organizing a corps of
- artificers—Rejected—Employment of artillerymen on the works at
- home—Duke of Richmond’s “Extensive plans of fortification”—Formation
- of corps ordered—Singular silence of the House of Commons on the
- subject—Mr. Sheridan calls attention to it—Insertion of corps for
- first time in the Mutiny Bill—Debate upon it in both Houses of
- Parliament.
-
-
-When Spain declared war with England in June, 1779, Lieutenant-Colonel
-Hugh Debbieg of the engineers, seems to have been impressed with the
-necessity of raising a corps of artificers for service in this country.
-He had made several excursions through Kent and a part of Sussex, no
-doubt with the object of ascertaining the probabilities that existed for
-resisting any attempt at invasion. Whether such was his intention or
-not, these professional tours appear to have assisted his views greatly,
-in all that was essential to prepare the country to repel aggression. He
-therefore made large demands for cutting tools; conceiving, as he
-states, “very extensive ideas of their use in all cases,” and
-recommended the formation of a corps of artificers. In his letter to
-General Lord Amherst, of the 30th July, 1779, he wrote: “I must take the
-liberty of mentioning how very advantageous to the service it would be,
-if a corps of artificers was to be selected from the army. The present
-establishment of pioneers to each regiment will prove in no case
-sufficient or equal to the purpose of advancing an army through such a
-country as this.”
-
-As if to show that his proposal was no crude idea, nor the dreamy
-suggestion of some needlessly-alarmed engineer, the Colonel dipped a
-little into the history of the subject, to claim respect for it on the
-ground of its antiquity, and pointed out the way in which the measure
-could be effected. He says, “The great attention of the ancients to this
-particular was wonderful, and the highest point of perfection in the
-Roman legion was, that when it made detachments, though ever so small,
-they carried with them a just proportion of the component parts of its
-excellent system—artificers of all denominations. Modern armies differ
-from those of the ancients scarcely in nothing but the arms they use; in
-all other points, we cannot imitate them too exactly. I am sensible the
-subject is not new to your lordship, and if it did not strike me as a
-thing absolutely necessary for the good of His Majesty’s service,
-particularly at this time, I should not have troubled your lordship
-thereon.
-
-“It is a most essential part of the soldiers' duty, I allow, to be as
-expert as possible at covering themselves with earthworks; but then,
-there is also a necessity for a band of leading men capable of
-instructing others, and of conducting works with more regularity than
-has been usually done where I have yet been upon service, as also with
-greater dispatch.
-
-“I will not presume to point out to your lordship the means of
-establishing such a corps, nor how far two men per company would go
-towards making it numerous enough for the purpose from the militia
-alone; but I will venture to say, had such a body of men been constantly
-here, these lines (Chatham) would have been nearly completed; and you
-know what state they are in at present.”
-
-Colonel Debbieg’s attempt to revive an old practice, constituting one of
-the military glories of the ancients, was certainly worthy of the best
-attention, involved as England was at the time in a struggle with France
-and Spain; and it would have been more so, had allusion been made to the
-beneficial services of the companies at Gibraltar. Omitting this is
-singular enough, and readily urges the supposition, that their name and
-duties were scarcely known beyond the scarps of the Rock, even to the
-engineers themselves. However, Lord Amherst, much as he may have
-appreciated the represented perfection of the Roman legion in the
-organization of its detachments, was not by any means disposed to incur
-the responsibility of reproducing that system in the English army; and
-on the 11th August following communicated his sentiments on the subject
-to the Colonel. “Your idea,” writes his lordship, “about forming a corps
-of artificers from the army, is a very good one, as far as that such a
-corps would be very desirable; but at a time when it is a material
-subject of consideration to increase the army by every possible means,
-the forming such a corps cannot be thought of. In the case of any
-service happening in this country, the general business of the pioneers
-must be done by the able-bodied men amongst the peasants of the
-country.”
-
-His lordship here confesses the desirableness of the measure, but at the
-same time repudiates it as inexpedient, because the army requires to be
-increased! No rejoinder or explanation appears to have been made by
-Colonel Debbieg; and the proposal, somewhat modified, was left to be
-iterated at a subsequent period by Charles, third Duke of Richmond.
-
-On the appointment of the Shelburne administration in July, 1783, his
-Grace was nominated Master-General of the Ordnance. Immediately after
-his installation, he caused the fortifications to be examined, and
-finding they were in such a state as to need the intervention of the
-House of Commons to put them in repair and completeness, he demanded
-large sums of money for the purpose in the Ordnance estimates for 1783.
-
-His Grace’s projects were on a scale of great magnitude, and his
-estimates were necessarily large; but in order to curtail the amounts as
-much as possible, and thus win the concurrence of both parties to his
-plans, he proposed to employ a considerable part of the royal artillery
-as artificers and labourers in the arsenal at Woolwich, Purfleet, and
-the outports, giving them only half the wages then paid to civil
-mechanics for performing similar work, whereby it was computed that a
-saving of 12,000_l._ to 15,000_l._ a-year would be realized, and that
-the services of the ordnance being more regularly performed, the
-regiment would have a body of artificers, always available for active
-duty in the event of a war, for which they would be much required.[68]
-There was nothing in this suggestion to excite alarm or particular
-remark. No new corps was recommended to be raised, but simply the
-adaptation of means already disposable (which would have to be
-maintained under any circumstances) to a twofold object, as also to
-lighten the existing pressure upon the finances of the State. The
-proposal, being merely incidental to the graver matter with which it
-stood connected, gave rise to no discussion; and it is presumed, though
-no specific organization of artificers such as his Grace contemplated
-took place, that artillery soldiers were employed in great numbers at
-the different stations mentioned in his Grace’s famous report.
-
-With the change of ministry in April, 1783, the Duke of Richmond quitted
-his post as Master-General; but resumed it again in the following
-December on the formation of the Pitt Cabinet. The fortifications
-continued to be his Grace’s hobby. Yearly he requested large sums for
-the erection of new works and the repair of old ones. Consequently,
-public attention was excited to review these apparently exorbitant items
-of expenditure, and, as may be expected, very little was done towards
-effecting his Grace’s views. Money was voted for the purpose, but none
-was expended.
-
-In 1785, his Grace’s plans for national defence were more extensive than
-ever, and were brought forward as usual by Mr. Pitt. Though anxious to
-carry out the gigantic projects proposed, still, from the growing
-inquisitiveness of the country, and probably the misgivings of the
-Minister himself as to their maturity and utility, Mr. Pitt submitted
-them for the opinion of a Board of general and flag officers. Guided by
-their recommendation, he again introduced the subject for the
-consideration of the House, but on the 27th February, 1786, it was
-rejected by the casting voice of the Speaker as a “measure totally
-inexpedient and dangerous.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- ‘Journal, House of Commons,’ 14th February, 1783; vol. xxxix. p. 208.
-
------
-
-In no way discouraged, however, on the 17th May following, he ventured
-to submit a similar question to the House considerably reduced in its
-demands. But as the subject of the fortifications had long been before
-the public, had also been well investigated, and was extremely unpopular
-both in the House and out of it, it may occasion no wonder to state,
-that the Duke’s favourite scheme was again set aside; and its noble
-projector, subjected to repeated and vexatious disappointments, was made
-a butt for the keen attacks and provoking taunts of individuals, who
-scrupled not to lay bare his Grace’s engineering, and to question his
-Grace’s professional attainments. In this last defeat, however, some
-little concession was made to Mr. Pitt, by which he was permitted to
-make an estimate for improving and completing the old works at
-Portsmouth and Plymouth dockyards, which on being presented was
-ultimately agreed to.[69]
-
------
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- If a particular acquaintance with the Duke’s plan of defence, &c., be
- desired, it can be obtained by referring to a work entitled
- ‘Observations on the Duke of Richmond’s Extensive Plans of
- Fortification,’ published first in 1785, and again in 1794. This work,
- which was brought before the public in an anonymous form, is known to
- have been written by Lieutenant James Glenie, of the engineers, who,
- after serving in the corps a few years, was compelled, as he says, p.
- 241, to leave it, “to avoid being ruined by the expense of continually
- moving from one station to another.” The attack made by this gentleman
- appears to have been conducted with much force and talent, displaying
- an intimate acquaintance with the principles of his profession. It
- made a great impression on the public mind, and augmented to a
- considerable extent the popular ferment against the new
- fortifications. Several of the engineers joined in opinion against
- them, among whom was Colonel Debbieg, who, for some expressions that
- he ventured, reflecting upon the Duke’s plans, was tried by a General
- Court-martial in 1789. In the concluding paragraph of the later
- edition of Mr. Glenie’s essay, the author promised to take an early
- opportunity of delivering his sentiments at full length respecting the
- corps of royal military artificers and horse artillery, which, he
- stated, were unquestionably great impositions on the public; but the
- promised _exposé_ I have not succeeded in procuring. If it never
- appeared, the gallant officer, very probably, prudently relinquished
- the idea, or suppressed the MS., from a conviction that it was as
- unnecessary as unmerited. It is certainly curious that Mr. Glenie and
- Colonel Debbieg, who were the most violent and persevering of the
- Duke’s opponents, should have differed in opinion about the usefulness
- and importance of the corps of artificers. By the only evidence as yet
- discovered, it is obvious that Mr. Glenie would willingly have
- disbanded it; Colonel Debbieg, on the other hand, only a few years
- before aspired to the honour of originating it.
-
------
-
-In the diminished estimate for 1786 the amount asked was quite
-inadequate to effect the purposes designed; and to enable his Grace the
-better to accomplish them, he suggested to Mr. Pitt the necessity of
-raising a corps of military artificers on the model of the companies
-employed at Gibraltar. Experience had demonstrated beyond all dispute
-their excellency as artificers and soldiers, and the economy of their
-services. He had watched and studied their discipline and advantage for
-some years, and with these incentives, he felt no hesitation in urging
-their immediate formation. Better reasons could scarcely have been
-desired by Mr. Pitt, who readily gave his assistance in obtaining a
-warrant from the King to sanction the measure. He did not attempt,
-however, to enlighten the House upon the matter before appealing to His
-Majesty, knowing that it would be treated with unmerited distrust, and
-probably crushed under a weight of prejudice and misconception. Strictly
-speaking, there was nothing unconstitutional in this manner of
-proceeding; it was warranted by many precedents, but it gave rise in a
-subsequent session of Parliament to some observations which required Mr.
-Pitt to explain his conduct in the affair. The warrant was signed on the
-10th October, 1787.
-
-The Ordnance estimates for that year were not brought forward until a
-late hour on the 10th December; and, as but little time was afforded for
-discussing their merits, and particularly the novel measure of embodying
-a corps of military artificers, a motion was made that their
-consideration should be adjourned to the next day. It was lost by a
-large majority, and the sums asked for were voted without debate.
-
-In this vote was involved the formation of the corps. That a measure on
-so extraordinary a principle, and so hateful to the sentiments of the
-country generally, should have passed without scrutiny is remarkable;
-but Mr. Sheridan, on the 17th December following, thinking that the
-estimates were imprudently hurried through the House, introduced them
-again to notice. At the same time he endeavoured to bring the suggestion
-of raising a corps of mechanics into contempt. He called the project
-singular and extraordinary; ridiculed the idea of putting the artificers
-under martial law, and thereby to abridge their liberty. Moreover, he
-did not conceive that men, capable of earning half-a-crown a-day, would
-enlist as soldiers and work in their respective occupations at one-third
-of that sum for the mere douceur of military discipline. Then, with
-regard to the economy of the measure, he remarked, “That in the report
-of 1783, the Master-General had stated, that by suffering some of the
-artificers at Woolwich, Sheerness, &c. to be put into companies, the
-artillery would never want artificers; and a saving of 15,000_l._ would
-be made to Government. Before, therefore, any new plan of raising a
-distinct corps of artificers was authorized, it would be proper to know
-what the saving made in consequence of the original plan had amounted
-to; because, if no great saving had been made, the plan now proposed
-would evidently be attended with additional expense to the public.”[70]
-Mr. Sheridan did not embody this subject in his motion. His remarks upon
-it were merely incidental to his speech on the intended fortifications
-in the West Indies, and elicited no discussion. The Chancellor of the
-Exchequer replied to Mr. Sheridan; but he spoke only to the motion, and
-made no allusion whatever to the new corps. Thus quietly did the Duke of
-Richmond gain a project, which there was reason to expect would not be
-granted without decided indications of repugnance and hostility.
-
------
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Dodsley’s ‘Annual Register,’ 1788. Second edit., 1790, p. 96.
-
------
-
-The scheme, however, though it easily received the approval of the House
-of Commons, was doomed, ere long, to have a severe sifting. In both
-Houses the question was very roughly handled by the Opposition. Had it
-been brought forward as a specific measure at first, it would, in all
-probability, have been rejected or passed by a scanty majority; but
-being covered by a vaster and more momentous question, it escaped
-observation and slipped through the Commons concealed under the wings of
-its parent. The time, however, had arrived, when the subject, stripped
-of its covering, should be laid bare, and fairly and openly discussed;
-but after a warm debate, the project was again sanctioned, and the
-formation of the corps confirmed. A summary of the debate, which
-originated in the introduction, for the first time, of the corps of
-artificers into the Mutiny Bill, and which is given in Dodsley’s ‘Annual
-Register’ for 1788,[71] is subjoined.
-
------
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Dodsley’s ‘Annual Register.’ Second edit., 1790, pp. 121-123.
-
------
-
-“On the 12th of March, the report of the Committee on the Mutiny Bill
-was brought up; and on reading the clause for incorporating in the army
-the newly-raised corps of military artificers, the same was strongly
-objected to as a dangerous innovation, and as militating against the
-most favoured principles of the constitution. The same system, it was
-said, might next be extended to shipwrights, and so on to every
-description of persons in the service of the executive government; and
-therefore the House was called upon to repel so alarming an innovation
-_in limine_. In defence of the measure it was urged, that it would be
-attended with an annual saving of 2,000_l._, upon an expenditure of
-22,000_l._; and that it was necessary to extend the military law to the
-corps in question, as the only means of keeping them together, and
-preventing their desertion of the public service in time of war.
-
-“This disposition to adopt a new principle of expediency and economy,
-upon a subject which went to the diminution of the liberties of the
-subject, instead of the old principle of actual necessity, was severely
-reprobated. Several country gentlemen declared, that if the House should
-agree to put 600 Englishmen under martial law, merely for the paltry
-consideration of saving 2,000_l._ per annum, they would betray their
-constituents, and would be devoid of those feelings for the
-constitution, which ought to make their distinguishing character. It was
-denied that any necessity for so extraordinary a surrender of the
-liberties of a part of the community was made out; it having never been
-asserted, nor being indeed true, in fact, that there was any difficulty
-in procuring artificers for the Ordnance service in time of war. The
-sense of the House being taken on the clause, there appeared, ayes 114,
-noes 67.[72]
-
------
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Clause Lxxv. Public Acts, 28 Geo. III., vol. i., p. 369. This was not
- a specific clause to meet the case of the artificers, but the same
- which had existed, with possibly slight variations, since its first
- insertion in the Act It merely included the corps by name, and made
- other necessary alterations to embrace classes of persons heretofore
- inadvertently omitted. Why it should have caused so much discussion,
- more especially with reference to the formation of the corps, is
- almost marvellous, since a more fitting opportunity was afforded for
- that purpose, when the Ordnance estimates were presented and passed in
- December of the previous year. What were Mr. Sheridan, Mr. Courtenay,
- and the other opponents of the Duke of Richmond’s schemes about, to
- allow this measure to steal a successful march upon them?
-
------
-
-“The same subject was again discussed on the third reading of the Mutiny
-Bill, when it was asked, whether any part of the corps was already
-enlisted and embodied? This question being answered in the affirmative,
-it was strongly contended that the authors of the measure had been
-guilty of an illegal act, in raising a body of men without the consent
-of Parliament; and that it was a violent and arbitrary measure to
-subject those men to military law, who at the time of their enlisting,
-were evidently not included in the Mutiny Act. On the other hand, Mr.
-Pitt contended, that, by a liberal interpretation of the King’s
-prerogative, government was authorized, on the late alarm of war, to
-raise the corps in question: and Sir Charles Gould, the
-Advocate-General, maintained, that every soldier enlisted, became, _ipso
-facto_, subject to be tried by martial law. The House again divided on
-the question, ayes 142, noes 70.
-
-“Upon the commitment of the Bill in the Upper House, the Duke of
-Manchester rose and declared his intention of opposing the novel clauses
-that it contained. He was an avowed enemy, he said, to the extension of
-military law, unless in cases of absolute necessity; and that the
-present Bill went unnecessarily to extend that law, by making a number
-of artificers subject to its severe effects, who had hitherto enjoyed
-their liberty in common with their fellow-subjects. Could it be proved
-necessary for the defence of the kingdom, he should not entertain the
-least objection to the increase of the army; but in a time of profound
-peace, the adoption of a measure of so singular a nature as the present,
-called for jealousy and caution.
-
-“The Duke of Richmond entered into a full explanation of the plan of
-which he had been the author. It had occurred to him, he said, that the
-formation of a regular corps of artificers, who would in future wars, be
-applicable to any service when wanted, either at home or abroad, could
-not but be attended with very beneficial consequences. In all the armies
-abroad, such a corps made part of those armies, and as their utility was
-unquestionable, he had concluded that there ought to be such a corps in
-our army, and therefore he had considered it as his duty to submit the
-proposition to His Majesty, who had approved of it, and it had been
-since laid before the House of Commons, and voted by that branch of the
-legislature. With regard to putting them in the Mutiny Bill, being a
-part of the army, enlisted regularly as soldiers, like other soldiers,
-they ought undoubtedly to become subjected to the same law, as the
-policy of the State had considered it as right that all soldiers should
-continue in such a state of subordination. At the same time, it was not
-to be considered as any hardship, since no species of trial, however
-popular it might be, was, he believed, more fair and candid than trials
-by court-martial. He added, that the corps of artificers proposed to be
-formed, was not only highly useful, but, at the same time, so far from
-being an additional expense, they would prove a saving, because the
-difference between getting such a number as heretofore, and having them
-formed into a regular corps as intended, would render the usual expense
-less by 2,000_l._
-
-“Lord Porchester objected principally to that part of the new
-establishment which subjected the artificers to the arbitrary punishment
-of the Master-General of the Ordnance. In one instance they might be
-reduced for want of skill, of which the Master-General was made the sole
-judge, to the rank of labourers, and thereby be deprived of one-third of
-their pay; and in another, he was also the sole judge of the quantum to
-which their pay should be reduced in cases of idleness or misbehaviour.
-
-“Lord Carlisle ridiculed the strange reason given for adopting the new
-project, that it would be a saving of 2,000_l._ a year. If their
-lordships were to be governed by such arguments, they would be led into
-so absurd a matter as the calculation of what the surrender of the
-rights of the subject was worth per man; and if the rights and liberties
-of 600 artificers were worth just 2,000_l._, they would see that the
-noble lord valued the rights of every individual exactly at 3_l._ 10_s._
-each.
-
-“Lord Cathcart and Lord Rawdon were of opinion, that the plan formed by
-the noble duke would be attended with many considerable military
-advantages; and the question being at length put, the clause was carried
-without a division. The corps now, for the first time, was made legally
-amenable to the provisions of the Mutiny Act; and, for a few years at
-least, was permitted to go on with its organization and duties without
-being again noticed or interrupted by the opposition in Parliament.”[73]
-
------
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- In the protracted debates which occurred in 1788, on the Regency, Mr.
- Sheridan took occasion, when opposing the measure for reserving the
- patronage of the royal household, to attack the Minister—Mr. Pitt, and
- to wing from his bow another caustic shaft at the royal military
- artificers. Mr. Pitt, at some previous time, had charged a right
- honourable friend of Sheridan’s, on quitting office, “with having left
- a fortress behind him.” Sheridan admitted that the accusation was
- true; “but then,” continued he, in a vein of sparkling raillery, “like
- a coarse, clumsy workman, his right honourable friend had built his
- plan in open day, and retired with his friends, who served without
- pay. * * * Not so the right honourable gentleman over the way. Like a
- more crafty mason he had collected his materials with greater caution,
- and worked them up with abundantly more art. Perhaps he had taken the
- advice of the noble Duke—famous for fortification—and, with the aid of
- that able engineer, had provided a corps of royal military artificers,
- and thrown up impregnable ramparts to secure himself and his garrison.
- Upon this occasion the King’s arms doubtless might be seen flying as a
- banner on the top of his fortress, and powerful indeed must prove the
- effect of the right honourable gentleman’s thundering eloquence from
- without, and the support of the royal artificers from within, against
- his political adversaries.”—Sheridan’s Dramatic Works. See Life, p.
- 138. Bohn’s edit., 1848.
-
- The last reference to the military artificers in Parliament was made
- by Mr. Courtenay on the 21st April, 1790, when, moving for a committee
- to inquire into the expenditure of the public money by the Duke of
- Richmond from the 1st January, 1784, he stated, among a variety of
- matter, that the corps of which his Grace was the founder, “were
- neither soldiers nor artificers.”—‘Gentleman’s Magazine,’ part 2,
- 1790, vol. 60, p. 720. This was followed, in 1794, by Mr. Glenie, who,
- in a second edition of his ‘Observations,’ declared that the corps was
- unquestionably a great imposition on the public. With this
- announcement the party crusade against the royal military artificers
- terminated.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1787—1788.
-
-Constitution of corps—Master artificers—Officers—Rank and post of the
- corps—Captains of companies, stations—Allowance to Captains,
- Adjutants—Recruiting—Labourers—“Richmond’s whims”—Progress of
- recruiting—Articles of Agreement—Corps not to do garrison
- duty—Sergeant-majors—John Drew—Alexander Spence—Uniform dress—Working
- dress—Hearts o’pipe-clay—“The Queen’s bounty”—Arms, &c.—Distinction of
- ranks—Jews' wish.
-
-The King’s authority “for establishing a corps of royal military
-artificers,” alluded to in the preceding chapter, was conveyed in a
-warrant, dated 10th October, 1787, to Charles Duke of Richmond. It was
-to consist of six companies of 100 men each. The constitution of each
-company, and the pay of its different ranks were fixed as follows:—
-
- s. d.
- 1 Sergeant-major 2 3 a-day }
- 3 Sergeants each 1 9 ” }
- 4 Corporals each 1 7 ” }
- 2 Drummers }
- }
- _Privates_— { } Working-pay, in addition,
- 12 Carpenters { } not exceeding 9_d._ a-day
- 10 Masons { } to each non-commissioned
- 10 Bricklayers { } officer and man for the
- 5 Smiths { each 0 9 ” } days actually employed on
- 5 Wheelers { } the works.
- 4 Sawyers { }
- 8 Miners { }
- 2 Painters { }
- 2 Coopers { }
- 2 Collar-makers. { }
- 30 Labourers each 0 6 ” }
-
-The sergeants consisted of a carpenter, a mason, and a smith, who were
-styled masters; and the corporals were a master bricklayer and a master
-wheeler, one foreman of miners and a foreman of labourers.[74] The civil
-master artificers had the offer of enlisting and being appointed to
-these ranks. Those who refused were discharged as soon as the military
-establishment was complete.
-
------
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Thus the higher branches of promotion were reserved to the three first
- classes of tradesmen, and none but men of the latter trades were
- promoted to the rank of corporals. This rule, though enforced as much
- as practicable, was necessarily deviated from in the lapse of a few
- years for the benefit of the service.
-
------
-
-Officers of the royal engineers were appointed to command the corps. All
-serving at the particular stations at which the companies were forming
-were attached to do duty with them.
-
-When required to parade with other regiments, the corps was directed to
-take post next on the left of the royal artillery. The officers were to
-fall in with the corps.[75]
-
------
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- The authority for this was not embodied in the warrant for raising the
- corps, but conveyed in a letter to the Duke of Richmond, dated 10th
- October, 1787. With regard to the officers falling in with their
- companies, it was necessary to issue a special order, as, by a
- previous warrant of the 25th April, 1787, the royal engineers were to
- take rank with the royal artillery, and to be posted on the right or
- left of that regiment, according to the dates of their commissions. At
- Gibraltar, it was the custom of the companies with their officers, to
- take the right of the artillery; and they were always inserted first
- in the Governor’s states and returns. This was a local arrangement
- occasioned, probably, on account of the companies being stationary at
- the fortress.
-
------
-
-The Duke of Richmond located the companies at the principal dockyards or
-military stations, and ordered the following officers to command them:—
-
- Woolwich—Colonel Robert Morse.
- Chatham—Colonel William Spry.
- Portsmouth—Colonel John Phipps.
- Gosport—Lieut.-Colonel James Moncrief.
- Plymouth—Lieut-Colonel Fred. George Mulcaster.
-
-One company was ultimately divided between the islands of Guernsey and
-Jersey.[76]
-
------
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- The companies at Gibraltar, although similarly constituted, paid, and
- officered, remained a distinct and separate body until their
- incorporation with the corps in the year 1797.
-
------
-
-The officers above named were the commanding royal engineers at the
-respective stations.[77] To each was allowed the sum of 56_l._ per annum
-for defraying certain incidental items connected with his company; and a
-lieutenant of engineers was appointed adjutant, with an extra allowance
-of 2_s._ a-day, to assist in conducting the drill and in maintaining
-discipline.
-
------
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- From this arrangement, it sometimes occurred that even a
- _Major-General_ was _captain_ of a company.
-
------
-
-The recruiting was carried on by the captains of companies, assisted by
-seven other officers of engineers, with several transferred soldiers of
-the royal artillery, at Landguard Fort, Tynemouth, Dover, Guernsey,
-Edinburgh, Fort George, and Berwick. They were not restrained from
-putting into operation any measure which seemed to be best calculated
-for obtaining recruits. There was no standard as to height fixed; but
-labourers were not enlisted over twenty-five years of age, nor any
-artificer over thirty, unless he had been employed as a mechanic in the
-Ordnance department, and known to be an expert workman of good
-character. All recruits, however, whether previously under the Ordnance
-or not, were “to be strong able-bodied men, free from all infirmity, and
-duly qualified for their several trades and occupations.” The miners
-were all got from Cornwall. The bounty given at first was five guineas
-to each attested recruit; which, on the 21st November, 1787, was reduced
-to the usual peace allowance of three guineas.
-
-These general instructions for recruiting were soon afterwards[78] much
-altered by the Duke of Richmond, who was anxious to make the corps as
-perfect as possible with regard to tradesmen. On the decision of his
-Grace all the men were afterwards enlisted as labourers at 6_d._ a-day.
-The bounty was continued at three guineas. Growing lads from sixteen to
-eighteen years of age, not under five feet four inches high, were
-preferred before all others, and were instructed in the trades most
-required by the corps. Over eighteen years of age none were taken less
-than five feet six inches.
-
------
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- In a letter bearing date 19th March, 1788.
-
------
-
-This was a measure of just precaution, as several men had already
-enlisted as artificers, who upon a fair trial were found to know but
-little of their craft. The Duke now thought to insure his object by
-enlisting every man as a labourer, and after a few months' experience of
-his abilities, promoting him to be an artificer, or retaining him as a
-labourer, until recommended for preferment. On promotion to artificers,
-each man received a bonus or reward of two guineas, an additional 3_d._
-a-day pay, and was distinguished from a labourer by being allowed finer
-clothing and a gold-laced hat.[79] “I think,” wrote his Grace, “that
-this method, although the slowest, will in the end be the best means of
-acquiring a good corps of artificers.” Whatever may have been the result
-of this change, it shows that the Duke was interested in the most
-trifling concerns of the corps; so much so indeed, that the men were
-aware of it, and familiarly styled his measures and arrangements
-“Richmond’s whims.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- For every labourer promoted, a guinea was granted to the master
- artificer, either civil or military, who had the credit of training
- him, as a compensation for his services and an encouragement to future
- exertion. This was sanctioned by his Grace in a letter dated 6th
- December, 1791.
-
------
-
-Great exertions were made to give effect to the Duke’s orders and
-wishes, particularly at Portsmouth and Plymouth, where the dockyards
-were to be fortified on a plan approved by his Grace. About three months
-after the date of the warrant, upwards of 100 men had been enrolled,
-besides several artificers transferred from the royal artillery to form
-the nucleus of each company. The growth of the corps was tardy at first
-and continued dilatory for a year and more; after which, however, as the
-prevailing prejudices began to die away, greater success was apparent.
-
-As the enlistment of mechanics to work at their trades under military
-discipline was quite new to the country, the greatest care was taken to
-prevent misconception and complaint. The Duke of Richmond was sensible
-that both his plans for national defence, and for the establishment of a
-corps to accomplish them, were sources of suspicion and watchfulness on
-the part of the Opposition in Parliament; and hence he was cautious,
-particular, and explanatory, even to indulgence. The recruit was
-required to sign certain articles of agreement, showing fully his
-obligations to the service, and those of the public towards himself.
-Among the terms was prominently placed his engagement “to be liable to
-all military duties, subject to the articles of war, and all other
-military discipline like other soldiers, and to serve in any part of the
-world to which his Majesty might order him.”[80]
-
------
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- This agreement was required to be attested by every recruit until
- about the year 1800, when it seems to have fallen into disuse.
-
------
-
-To protect the companies from being unnecessarily interfered with, and
-to insure their constant employment on the works, directions were given
-to the commandants or governors of the different garrisons where they
-were stationed, not to call upon them to do any duty that would take
-them from the public works, except in cases of war, internal commotion,
-or any very urgent necessity. Such has been the abiding rule of all
-garrisons to the present day, and the corps is only expected to provide
-its own essential guards.
-
-The sergeant-majors were selected from the royal artillery, first being
-recommended as competent to drill and pay a company, and able to enforce
-discipline and maintain order, which were the duties they were
-particularly required to attend to. None were tradesmen. Most, if not
-all, had been in the American war, had distinguished themselves in
-action, and were promoted into the corps as a reward for their
-services.[81]
-
------
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- John Drew was one of the sergeant-majors. He was the first soldier
- that entered the English corps of military artificers. On May 1st,
- 1795, he was commissioned to be second lieutenant in the invalid
- artillery, from which he retired in March, 1819, and died at Woolwich
- November 9, 1830. One of his daughters married the late Richard Byham,
- Esq., secretary to the honourable Board of Ordnance. A son—Richard
- Robinson Drew—attained the rank of Major in the royal artillery, and
- married Geriloma Barona, daughter of the late Marquis di Montebello.
- This lady died on the 4th September, 1854, and the Major survived her
- only four months. Both were interred in the family mausoleum at
- Messina. Though springing from a stock without any remarkable
- antecedents, good fortune seems to have attended the career of the
- offspring of the worthy sergeant-major; and much as his son may have
- added distinction to his race by his matrimonial alliance with a lady
- of high birth, it was still more honoured in the person of his
- granddaughter, who was wedded to the noble Prince di Castelcicala, the
- late Minister Plenipotentiary for Sicily.
-
- Another of the sergeant-majors was Alexander Spence. He was born in
- 1726, and enlisted into the 20th Foot, January 16, 1756. After a
- service of 19 years in that regiment, and 14 as sergeant in the North
- Hants Militia, he joined the corps at the age of 61!! This is the
- period when men usually think of retiring from active employment and
- preparing for the end of life. Not so Spence. He was still a recruit,
- hale and hearty, and served his country for a further period of 21
- years! If nature had taken her course, he might have lived to a great
- age, but disappointed in his expectation of receiving a
- sub-lieutenancy in the corps, he committed suicide January 11, 1809,
- at the age of 83.
-
------
-
-The uniform, which was issued every alternate year, consisted of a blue
-coat with long skirts, rolling collar, black cloth facings, white
-shalloon lining to the skirts, and lappels at the breast; which, with
-the slashes on the cuffs and pocket-holes, were laced with rectangular
-loops, having a button at one end of the loop. The buttons were similar
-in size, material, and device to those already described as being
-regimental at Gibraltar. At the breast frills were worn, and at the
-wrist small ruffles. The stock was of black leather with a false collar
-turned over it about a quarter of an inch. The breeches and waistcoats
-were of white cloth, and the gaiters of black cloth, which reached as
-high as the knee, and were secured round the leg by a row of small
-buttons, eighteen in number, on the outer seam. To prevent them twisting
-they were steadied by a button at the bend of the knee. The cocked hat,
-worn transversely, was ornamented with a binding of gold lace, a short
-red feather, horse-hair rosette, and gold loop and button. The hair was
-clubbed and powdered. Plate III.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate III.
- UNIFORM 1787 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The working dress was a plain white raven duck, or canvas frock,
-reaching nearly to the ankles, with a rolling collar, and brass buttons
-down the front; white duck waistcoat and pantaloons, tongued and
-buttoned at the bottom, and plain black felt hats.[82] Leather stocks
-and frilled shirts were also worn. The hair was queued but not powdered.
-Plate IV.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate IV.
- WORKING-DRESS, 1787 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
------
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- While waiting for the issue of their regimental costume, the men, to
- appear smart and clean, pipe-clayed their frocks, vests, and
- pantaloons, and marched on Sundays to church as white as snow, and
- “stiff as buckram.” Unavoidably rubbing against each other during the
- service, the wash being thus set free, filled the sanctuary with
- clouds of white powder, which gave rise to the playful designation, by
- which they were known for some time, of “Hearts o’pipe-clay.”
-
------
-
-Two suits of this dress were furnished to every man annually—each suit
-lasted six months. They were also provided with a pair of serge breeches
-and a flannel waistcoat. Under what circumstances and on what occasions
-these articles were to be worn, was never determined, and the men were
-therefore at liberty to dispose of them as they pleased. To distinguish
-them from the necessary items of the working dress, they were
-denominated “The Queen’s Bounty.”
-
-The arms of the rank and file were those common to the period—firelocks,
-pouches and cross belts of buff leather pipe-clayed. The sergeants had
-pikes, and long narrow thrust-swords—the latter purchased at their own
-expense: the gripe was steel, with a single gilt guard; the scabbard was
-black leather, mounted with a gilt tip, top and boss, and the shoulder
-belt, with a frog to hold the sword, was pipeclayed like those of the
-privates. The sergeant-majors wore swords and belts the same as the
-sergeants, but no pikes. The drummers were armed with brass-handled
-swords, short in the blade, but broader than the sergeants, and black
-scabbards with brass mounting. All ranks had a square breast-buckle to
-their belts; those of the superior ranks were gilt.
-
-The distinctions in regard to rank were as follows:—_Labourers_, coarse
-clothing, yellow tape lace on their coatees and hats. _Artificers_,
-clothing of a much finer quality, same kind of tape lacing on their
-coatees, but gold lace on their hats. _Drummers_, same clothing as
-artificers, with this difference—instead of plain yellow tape, they had
-broad livery lace of a quality like tape, bearing the Ordnance arms of
-three guns and three balls, extending from the collar downwards in
-parallel stripes. _Corporals_, same as artificers in every respect, but,
-in addition, small gold-fringed knots on the shoulders.[83] _Sergeants_,
-crimson sashes and swords, gold lace on coats, but no knots on
-shoulders: they wore laced straps only. _Sergeant-majors_, sashes and
-swords, gold lace on coatees, bullion epaulettes, and silk velvet
-facings.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- A yellow silk knot was regimental; this the corporals were permitted
- to dispose of for a gold-fringed knot. In most of the companies the
- corporals wore knots on each shoulder. In the Woolwich company, one
- only was worn on the right shoulder.
-
-In the working dress there was no apparent distinction between the
-labourers, artificers, and drummers. The corporals and sergeants were
-distinguished by black hats of the same shape as the privates, with a
-gold-lace band, about an inch broad, around the bottom of the pole, and
-their frocks, &c., were finer in fabric and whiter in colour. The
-sergeant-majors always appeared in uniform, for which purpose they were
-allowed a complete suit annually.
-
-It may not be amiss to notice, in connection with the dress of the
-corps, an interesting offer that was made to the companies at Gibraltar,
-on the change of their uniform from red and yellow to blue and black. At
-the fortress the companies were much esteemed for their good conduct and
-civility, and the best understanding existed between them and the
-inhabitants. This feeling of respect was particularly shared by the
-Jews, who desired to express it in a manner that would be more
-convincing than a mere verbal assurance. On the new clothing arriving at
-the Rock, the Jews, regarding the alteration with satisfaction, agreed
-among themselves to provide for the companies, as a mark of their
-regard, whatever gold lace might be required for the clothing, free of
-cost, to be worn in place of the yellow tape; but it need hardly be
-mentioned, that the desired deviations of this kind people from the
-established patterns of the corps could not be permitted.
-
-
-
-
- 1789—1792.
-
-Appointment of Quartermaster and Colonel-Commandant—Distribution of
- corps, Captains of companies—Jealousy and ill-feeling of the civil
- artificers—Riot at Plymouth—Its casualties—Recruits wrecked on passage
- to Gibraltar—Song, “Bay of Biscay, O!”—Defence of the Tower of London
- against the Jacobins—Bagshot-heath encampment—Alterations in the
- uniform and working dress.
-
-
-Heretofore the captains of the different companies communicated with the
-Master-General or his secretary direct. This led to much inconvenience,
-and tended to establish a distinctiveness of character and position for
-each company, that was neither contemplated nor desired. To prevent its
-continuance, the Duke of Richmond, on the 13th January, appointed
-Lieutenant William George Phipps, royal engineers, quartermaster to the
-corps; and on the 12th February, directed the chief royal engineer,
-Major-General Sir William Green, Bart.—who originated the companies at
-Gibraltar, and served with them at the fortress until November 1786—to
-be Colonel-Commandant. The former attended to all matters connected with
-the clothing, &c., and to the latter all the correspondence concerning
-the different companies was addressed.
-
-The first complete returns of the corps which have yet been found occur
-in the month of February, immediately after Sir William Green’s
-appointment. From these returns and other documents, the following
-information relative to the distribution of the corps, the strength of
-the different companies, and the names of the captains, have been
-collected, viz.:—
-
- Strength of Company. Captains.
- Woolwich 47 Colonel Robert Morse.
- Chatham 47 Colonel William Spry.
- Portsmouth 72 Lieut-Colonel Fred. Geo. Mulcaster.
- Gosport 69 Lieut.-Colonel James Moncrief.
- Plymouth 104 Lieut.-Colonel Edward W. Durnford.
- Guernsey 6 Lieut.-Colonel Alexander Mercer.
- Jersey Formation not commenced.
-
-The company at Plymouth was above the established strength, arising from
-the works there being more important than at any other station. In May
-the strength of the half company at Guernsey was twenty-three of all
-ranks, and at Jersey twenty-one.
-
-Symptoms of discontent were frequently shown by the civil mechanics in
-the Government service at the authorized employment of the military
-artificers. They looked upon the measure as a political move, or as a
-dangerous experiment to ascertain how it would work; and then, if found
-to answer, to extend a like control to the other workmen in the Crown
-establishments. This notion they imbibed from the expressed
-apprehensions of some leading men of the liberal party in parliament;
-and, as a consequence, they were jealous of the military artificers,
-whom they treated with great disrespect. A species of rivalry was thus
-induced that rather increased than allayed the feeling of mutual
-animosity. The civilians were not sparing of their taunts, nor were the
-military artificers as temperate in their retorts as might have been
-wished. Quarrels naturally ensued, individual feuds were frequent, and
-in this way did the civilians endeavour to hold up the military
-artificers to ridicule and disgrace for the purpose of goading the
-Government to disband them; but how far they succeeded the existence of
-the corps at this day affords a satisfactory reply.
-
-At one of the stations the bad feeling that existed between the civil
-and military artificers was exhibited in an altercation that originated
-between the latter and some sailors, in which the dock workmen
-interfered. This brought about a serious rupture, the particulars and
-consequences of which are given below
-
-Matches for wrestling and cudgelling between soldiers and sailors were
-arranged to take place in a field adjoining Stoke Church, near Plymouth,
-on the afternoon of the 4th June—the King’s birthday—on which occasion
-the soldier-artificers, in common with the civilians, were granted a
-holiday. The victors were to be rewarded with buckskin breeches and
-silver cups. But few of the military would venture to take part in the
-amusements, so that the company and the sailors, and some mechanics of
-the dock-yard, were the principal actors. The men of the
-soldier-artificers who entered the lists were chiefly from Cornwall and
-adepts at wrestling, They only went, however, to witness the games—not
-to join in them; and it was not till they were challenged that they
-entered the arena. Having done so, they exerted themselves according to
-the fashion of their country, and succeeded in gaining almost the whole
-of the prizes; which, as was natural, they bore away with suitable
-demonstrations of pride and pleasure.
-
-A dispute arose between a couple of rivals about the unfair award of a
-prize. It was given to a sailor, although fairly earned by a
-military-artificer. The misunderstanding would have been easily settled
-had it been left to the wrestlers themselves to decide; but the dock
-people interfered, and fomented the quarrel, directing their abuse in
-particular to the soldier-artificers. For a time the latter calmly
-submitted to these insults, and yielded the prize for the sake of peace;
-but roused at length to retaliate, they sought satisfaction in the
-ordinary way by fighting. Overpowered, however, by numbers, they were
-very severely treated and driven into barracks, where they remained for
-two or three hours. At last, breaking this self-imposed restraint, they
-again appeared in the town, having taken the precaution to prepare
-themselves with pick-handles and short sticks concealed about their
-persons, to resist any attempt at violence on the part of the civilians;
-and the better to cope with their opponents, they walked into the
-streets, when occasion required, in small parties or sections; which,
-however, had the unfortunate semblance of defiance, and excited the
-sailors and dockmen to renew their insolence.
-
-Thus aggravated, the military artificers fell upon the civilians and
-drove them pell-mell through the town. Intelligence of the resumed
-affray soon spread, and numbers of holiday folk joined the ranks of the
-rabble. Armed with bludgeons, staves, and broom-handles, the civilians
-paraded the streets, and finding a small party of the military
-artificers refreshing themselves at an inn, the rabble entered and
-furiously attacked them. Against such overwhelming odds the little party
-could not hold up, and being easily mastered, they were forcibly ejected
-from the house and pursued to the barracks.
-
-What had happened was, as yet, merely a series of individual or
-sectional encounters—the preliminaries to something more serious. Galled
-by a second reverse, the military artificers now mustered in full
-strength, together with their non-commissioned officers, and sallied
-into the street, brandishing brooms, pick-handles, clumps of wood, and
-various other unmilitary weapons. Some marines and a few other soldiers,
-sympathizing with the company, joined in the unhappy broil. By this time
-the civilians and sailors were also considerably strengthened, and every
-moment crowds were pouring in to swell the hostile mob.
-
-The instant the two parties came in sight the conflict recommenced.
-Closely and warmly it continued for about an hour, when the civilians
-gave way, running in all directions from the field and leaving the
-military victors. The mob, soon rallied, and assembled more numerous
-than before, on the government ground between Cumberland and St.
-George’s Squares, to make another and a final struggle for the
-ascendancy. Thither the military artificers with their partisans
-hurried. Nothing dismayed by the numbers collected to oppose them, they
-resumed the combat. Pokers, bars of iron, and bludgeons were used with
-merciless fury; stones of all sizes, broken bottles, and crockery-ware
-were thrown, and weapons even were pressed into the riot. The scene that
-ensued was frightful, and the civilians continued the contest with much
-rancour and obstinacy. They were routed once, but suddenly turning, they
-dashed at the soldiers again with a frenzy that deserved a better
-result. The effort exhausted them; the spirit of the soldiers was
-stirred afresh, and, plunging among the enraged but feeble throng, they
-spared none that had the daring to confront them. Beaten at every point
-by a handful of soldiers, the civilians faced about, and retreated
-precipitately from the contest by the nearest avenues. The military
-artificers and soldiers, flushed with success, would have pursued them,
-and repaid their insolence in a manner not soon to be forgotten; but by
-the activity of Captain Jonathan Passingham, of the 38th Regiment, who
-paraded the town with the main guard from the lines, the intention was
-frustrated. The conflict lasted several hours, and many of each party
-were left for dead. Several, however, soon recovered, and it was then
-found that the casualties were—one military artificer killed, and two
-severely wounded; and on the side of the sailors and dock men, one
-killed, two mortally wounded who died, and three severely wounded.[84]
-Of the less serious wounds and accidents, from which very few escaped,
-no notice appears to have been taken.
-
------
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- ‘Public Advertiser.’ June 11th, 1789.
-
------
-
-For three days the company was confined to barracks by order of the
-Commandant, to allay the popular excitement. But whatever may be thought
-of the part taken by the military artificers in this riot, certain it is
-that it taught the dock workmen a good lesson, and had the effect of
-repressing their insults and annoyances, and making their future
-demeanour more pacific and respectful.
-
-Several recruits having enlisted in Scotland for the companies at
-Gibraltar, passage was provided for them on board a ship—the name of
-which cannot be confidently traced—and they landed or “joined” at the
-fortress on the 16th April, 1791. When in the Bay of Biscay the vessel
-encountered a white squall, accompanied by terrific thunder and
-lightning, which carried, away her main and foremasts. Each moment,
-indeed, her final plunge was expected, and the passengers and crew,
-clinging to spars and boxes, shreds of sails, and fragments of the
-dismantled bulwarks, as the last and only chance for their lives,
-awaited in suspense the time when the dread alternative must be taken.
-With the appearance of the morning, providentially came the desired
-calm. All hands immediately set to work to right the vessel; the
-jury-mast was rigged, and the shivered ship, once more under weigh, wore
-on with struggling throes, and made good her passage to the Rock. The
-wreck and its circumstances gave rise to a song, called “The Bay of
-Biscay, O!”[85]
-
------
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- There exists two ballads with this title, one justly celebrated in the
- royal navy, written by Andrew Cherry, and embodied in Dibdin’s “Naval
- and National Songs,” and the other by a homely mariner, named, it is
- said, John Williams. Both songs may have taken their origin from the
- vessel spoken of above. Be this as it may, without doubt, one or the
- other was written to record the distress and struggles of the ship
- which conveyed the artificers to Gibraltar.
-
- The incidents of the affair related in the first edition of this
- history were made to correspond with the seaman’s effusion, as there
- were reasons at the time for believing it referred to the vessel with
- the recruits on board; but, as on a closer review, there are doubts
- about its application, the details given in the former edition are
- omitted in this, leaving the question to be solved at a future day.
-
- If the ballad of the seaman have reference to the ship in which the
- artificers sailed to the Rock, it differs in two known points from the
- facts of its voyage. The “Caroline” is the ship of the song, and she
- is said to have _sailed from Spithead on the fourteenth day of April_,
- whereas the party of recruits _sailed_ apparently _from Scotland, and
- positively_ landed, or, to use the official word, “_joined_,” _at
- Gibraltar on the 16th April_.
-
- The seaman’s “Bay of Biscay, O!” is worked up in pure Grub-street
- doggrel; but bad as it is, it has been rendered worse, particularly in
- the last verse, by the tampering of some grossly vulgar hand. In the
- lapse of years the precise wording of that Catnach composition has
- probably been lost, and the version that exists, filled up by the
- imperfections of tradition, may have had its dates and places
- disturbed. In a printed form the ballad, seemingly, cannot be
- obtained.
-
- If the differences just shown be considered fatal to the relationship
- between the sailor’s song and the vessel noticed in the narrative,
- then Cherry’s very popular ballad belongs to the history of the
- sappers and miners.
-
------
-
-In January and February, 1792, the Woolwich company was employed at the
-Tower of London, constructing an earthen battery for four guns in front
-of the gates, and a wooden battery for four guns, projecting from the
-coping of the wall of the fortress facing the Minories, to sweep the
-ditch and the hill. These defensive measures were undertaken by Captain
-Holloway of the engineers, sergeant John Watson being the overseer, and
-were intended to oppose any attack on the Tower which might be attempted
-by the turbulent Jacobins.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate V.
- UNIFORM 1792 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The Prussian system of tactics being lately introduced into the army, it
-was ordered that a union of corps should take place to ascertain its
-efficiency. An encampment for the purpose was formed on Bagshot Heath,
-early in July, under the Duke of Richmond, the Master-General of the
-Ordnance. The regiments present were the 2nd, 3rd, 14th, and 29th Foot;
-two regiments of light dragoons, two battalions of artillery, and one
-company of military artificers, made up of men from the Woolwich,
-Chatham, Portsmouth, and Gosport, companies, under Lieutenant-Colonel
-Moncrief, royal engineers. The sergeant-majors of these four companies
-were present. A large quantity of intrenching implements and tradesmen’s
-tools accompanied the party. The encampment lasted for about a month,
-the troops marching from one position to another, and manœuvring in a
-body, as if in actual warfare. During this time there were three grand
-field-days and two _sham_ battles; at the whole of which his Majesty was
-present, as also, on some occasions, were the Prince of Wales and the
-Dukes of York and Gloucester. The company of artificers manœuvred
-with the troops when not otherwise required; but more generally they
-were employed in making bridges over small rivulets for the passage of
-the troops, throwing up occasional earthworks, as well as mining and
-constructing wooden redoubts. One of the mines was sprung on the 4th
-August, and created quite a spectacle. It raised the earth in a solid
-mass about thirty feet in diameter, throwing its contents to a
-considerable distance. Another mine was exploded on the 7th August,
-under one of the advanced redoubts, with equal success; but the third
-and last mine was the largest, and almost amazing in its effects. Of
-this mine some particulars have been preserved. Upon a round hill was
-erected one of Colonel Moncrief’s square wooden redoubts, that the
-results of the mine under it might be better discerned. The artificers
-broke ground against the side of the hill, 152 feet from the redoubt,
-and about 20 feet below the summit of the hill. The first gallery was
-driven 112 feet in length, about 3 feet wide, and 3½ feet high, from
-whence commenced a turning 22 inches wide and 3 feet high, which
-stretched under the redoubt. A second turning of 6 feet was made for the
-chamber, into which was put a wooden box of gunpowder lined with pitched
-canvas. The quantity of powder used was 72 lbs., and was exploded by
-means of a wooden trough containing a canvas pipe filled with powder.
-When fired, the whole redoubt was lifted up about 40 feet, and
-disappeared in fragments, dust, and smoke, leaving a large chasm where
-it stood, nearly 40 feet wide and 20 feet deep. It was a magnificent
-sight, and called forth the spontaneous acclamations of the throng that
-witnessed it, and the praises of the Duke of Richmond.[86] These were
-the _first field services_ in which any of the military artificers had
-been employed. They returned to their respective stations about the 8th
-August.[87]
-
------
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- For full information concerning these experimental operations and
- manœuvres, see the ‘Public Advertiser’ for July 9th, August 7th,
- and August 10th, 1792.
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- To show how interested and considerate the Duke of Richmond was, in
- even trivial matters connected with the corps, it may be mentioned
- that on the 28th September, 1792, he ordered that six married private
- labourers, who had been at Bagshot Camp under his command, should each
- be paid half-a-guinea as a donation for the inconvenience and expense
- they were subjected to in being absent from their families.
-
------
-
-This year the black felt round hat superseded the cocked hat. The
-drummers' livery lace was a mixture of black, red, and yellow
-worsted—the Ordnance device was not woven in it as formerly. It was sewn
-on the coats in the same style as the privates' lace. Worsted wings of
-the three colours intermixed were now worn by the drummers for the first
-time. The quality of the cloth in all ranks was somewhat deteriorated
-this year. Plate V.
-
-To suit the seasons the working dress was considerably altered. In
-summer a plain raven duck jacket was substituted for the long frock of
-1787. The duck waistcoat for summer was abolished. In winter a blue
-jacket with black cuffs and collar was worn, precisely similar in cut
-and make to the duck jacket. With this jacket a flannel waistcoat was
-worn, and serge trowsers or pantaloons of the same form or style as the
-original pantaloons. To the “Queen’s Bounty,” consisting of a pair of
-serge breeches and an under serge waistcoat, was added a second serge
-waistcoat. The shirts were now worn quite plain in front; the hair
-continued to be queued; and the sergeants and corporals to be
-undistinguished in rank in the working dress. Plate VI.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate VI.
- WORKING DRESS 1794 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 1793.
-
-War with France—Artificers demanded for foreign service—Consequent
- effects—Detachment to West Indies—Fever at Antigua—Detachment to
- Flanders—Siege of Valenciennes—Waterdown Camp—Reinforcement to
- Flanders—Siege of Dunkirk—Nieuport—Another reinforcement to
- Flanders—Toulon—Private Samuel Myers at Fort Mulgrave—Formation of
- four companies for service abroad—Establishment and strength of corps.
-
-
-Louis XVI. having been dragged to the scaffold and beheaded, the event
-became the subject of grave consideration in the British Cabinet,
-resulting in the dismissal of the French ambassador in London, and in
-the declaration of war by the Convention against Great Britain.
-Immediately following this publication of hostilities, British troops
-were sent to Holland to co-operate with those of the Stadtholder against
-the common enemy, as well to the West Indies for the reduction of the
-French settlements there.
-
-The new position into which England was thrown by the declaration of
-war, gave prominence to a feature in the royal military artificers,
-which had almost been lost sight of;—that was, the liability of the men
-to serve in any part of the world wherever their services might be
-required. Although every care was taken to prevent misconception on this
-point, by obtaining from every recruit a signed agreement, expressive of
-his willingness to comply with this condition, still, it was regarded by
-all, as a mere formal arrangement, never to be acted upon; and in this
-notion they were afterwards strengthened by the fact, that when
-candidates were desired for service at Gibraltar, none were sent there
-unless with their own free consent. Now, however, their forgotten
-agreements were shown to be binding, and, accordingly, men were demanded
-from the English companies for active service in Flanders and the West
-Indies.
-
-As may be supposed, the order occasioned no little surprise and regret,
-as at this period, the military artificers were living under
-circumstances of the most favourable character—treated indeed more like
-citizens than soldiers. Many were married and had families; some few had
-property in land and houses; and all, or nearly all, had profitable
-engagements in civil life, which they were permitted by their officers
-to follow, after the demands of the service had been attended to. To
-avoid therefore the chance of being separated from such advantages,
-several obtained their discharges by providing substitutes at
-considerable cost, whilst a far greater number took the very
-dishonourable alternative of deserting. During the year 1793, the
-desertions were, perhaps, more in number than in any other year since
-the formation of the corps.
-
-The Plymouth company was called upon to furnish one corporal and
-seventeen private miners for the service of the Engineer department in
-the West Indies, who, embarking in February, in due time, arrived at
-Grenada. Divided between that island and Antigua, they had scarcely
-commenced their duties before the unhealthiness of the climate began to
-be felt among them. Fever, the prevailing scourge of the islands, seized
-them, and ere the close of the year, all, except private William
-Trevethick, had died! He survived his comrades about two and a half
-years; and with his decease was completed the extermination, by fever,
-of the first foreign detachment of the corps.
-
-At Antigua, it should be mentioned, that the malady was conveyed on
-shore through the unconscious imprudence of one of the party. He had
-gone on board a vessel called the ‘Experiment,’ which had just arrived
-in English Harbour in great distress, having lost nearly all her hands
-by fever. Of the existence of the disease in the ship the artificer was
-not aware, and he slept in a blanket belonging to one of the dead men.
-Seized with the disorder, he died in a few hours, and his wearing
-apparel and blanket, being taken to the Ordnance quarters as his
-property, the infection was thus communicated to the rest of the
-detachment; next to the artillery, and from them it spread to the 31st
-regiment, committing fearful ravages in its course.[88]
-
------
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- Southey’s ‘Chron., Hist. West Indies,’ iii., p. 72.
-
-Five non-commissioned officers, 30 artificers, 50 labourers, and 1
-drummer; total 86, collected from the different stations and formed into
-a company at Woolwich, under Captain Gother Mann, R.E., embarked at the
-royal arsenal on the 16th of March, to join the army in the Low
-Countries under the Duke of York, taking with them an abundant
-assortment of intrenching and tradesmen’s tools. Most of the men had
-been encamped, in 1792, at Bagshot Heath, and were in some measure
-acquainted with the art of field fortification and military mining.
-Colonel Moncrief, who had greatly distinguished himself during the
-American war, was appointed chief engineer to the expedition.
-
-Of the company’s landing, and its early services in Holland, nothing is
-known, but at the siege of Valenciennes it played an important part. All
-the non-commissioned officers, and most of the more skilful of the
-miners, acted as foremen, and from 300 to 400 men were frequently placed
-under the executive charge of one military artificer. Those of the
-company not considered fit for overseers, were distributed singly among
-the working parties to stimulate them by their example to equal zeal and
-exertion. In the more difficult services of the siege, or when occasion
-required, the labourers, miners, and artificers, of the company worked
-in twos or in greater numbers. The working party from the line was
-seldom less than 14,000 a day.
-
-In the final assault of the fortress, on the 25th of July, a portion of
-the company under Captain Sutherland, R.E., was attached to the left
-column appointed to attack the salient angle of the ravelin of the
-hornwork. Three globes of compression which had been pushed under the
-works to be stormed, were exploded at short intervals, after nine
-o’clock, with complete success. Breaches being thus formed for the
-columns to enter the works, they did so with great ardour and forced the
-enemy to fly into the fortress. While these external operations were in
-course of accomplishment, the miners bravely rushed from the ditch into
-the enemy’s subterranean galleries, took the workmen in them, and saved
-the mine from being sprung. To these underground manœuvres and the
-promptitude and gallantry of the detachment of artificers and line
-workmen in preventing the explosion of the enemy’s mines, the fall of
-Valenciennes was chiefly indebted. It capitulated on the 28th of July.
-Sir James Murray, in a despatch, dated 26th July, 1793, thus writes—“A
-detachment of the company of artificers, under Captain Sutherland,
-accompanied the column to the ravelin of the hornwork, and performed the
-duty allotted to them with great activity and resolution.” One
-labourer—private Robert Freeman—was killed.[89]
-
------
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- ‘London Gazette Extraordinary,’ August 1, 1793.
-
------
-
-General Dundas, about this period, introduced the system of drill so
-long distinguished by his name; and to test its efficiency a camp was
-formed on the 1st of July, at Waterdown, under the Duke of Richmond. The
-troops, both horse and foot, numbered 7,000. To this camp was attached,
-by the Duke’s order, four non-commissioned officers, thirty-six
-privates, and one drummer of the military artificers, under Lieutenant
-George Bridges, R.E., who took with them a proportion of field
-implements and artificers' tools. For three weeks, the season being
-exceedingly fine, the drill was briskly carried on; but was succeeded by
-an interval of idleness and discomfort occasioned by heavy and
-continuous rain. On the 4th of August, the troops moved to Ashdown
-Forest, where they manœuvred for a week and finally marched to
-Brighton: there they drilled for a fortnight, producing some grand
-military displays in the presence of the Prince of Wales, and returned
-to their stations on the 22nd of August. In the purely military
-evolutions of the camp the artificers took no part; but when the troops
-were moving they always preceded them to construct temporary bridges
-over the rivulets and ditches that intercepted the march, and to cut
-away obstacles to afford an easier road for the passage of the
-artillery. The materials for the bridges were cut on the spot, formed
-into faggots, and hastily thrown over the streams in view of the troops.
-At Brighton, the party was daily occupied in bridge-making, and became
-very expert in that description of field service.[90]
-
------
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- During the formation of one of the bridges, Mrs. Fitzherbert (who had
- paid a visit to the Prince of Wales at Brighton) was riding by alone.
- Sergeant John Johnston, who was in charge of the party, recognizing
- the favourite, very politely touched his cap in compliment to her, and
- she immediately pulled up. After asking a variety of questions
- concerning the work, she praised the men for their exertions, and
- desired that each should receive an extra day’s pay. For this purpose
- she gave the sergeant sufficient money, and taking a note of his name,
- commended him for his civility and promised to remember him. Very
- shortly after he received the offer of an ensigncy in a regiment in
- the West Indies, and sailing thither in November, received his
- commission in the 29th Foot, 1st May, 1796. It was supposed that Mrs.
- Fitzherbert, true to her promise, had exerted her influence and
- obtained this appointment for him. George Ross, the other sergeant
- present with the party, was commissioned as Lieutenant in the
- Carnarvon Militia, in October, 1796.
-
------
-
-A few days previous to the dispersion of the camp, the Duke of Richmond
-ordered another selection of four non-commissioned officers and
-ninety-eight artificers and labourers, to be made from the English
-companies to reinforce the corps in Flanders; and in order that the
-party should be formed of the most efficient men, his Grace desired as
-many as could be spared to be taken for the service from the Brighton
-detachment. To press as lightly as possible upon individual interests,
-volunteering was freely allowed, and the remainder were obtained by
-casting lots. The companies at Woolwich, Portsmouth, and Gosport, were
-also required to provide their quota; and being collected at
-head-quarters, they sailed late in August, and in a few days arrived at
-Ostend. With this reinforcement, the military artificers in the Low
-Countries amounted to 7 non-commissioned officers, 41 artificers, 104
-labourers, and 1 drummer; total 153.
-
-Immediately on landing, they were marched to join the company then
-before Dunkirk, and were employed in the operations for the reduction of
-that fortress until the 7th of September, when the Duke of York was
-compelled to abandon his position. On returning to the Artillery Park,
-the artificers exerted themselves in spiking all the guns that could not
-be carried with the army and in disabling their carriages, as well as in
-throwing about 500 barrels of gunpowder into the river and destroying
-nearly all the intrenching tools. In this siege, three artificers were
-killed—privates William Drummond, John Fairbairn, and John Wilson; and
-one was missing—private Thomas Howell; but of the number wounded, no
-record can be found. Colonel Moncrief, the chief engineer, was
-dangerously wounded in repulsing a sortie by the enemy on the 6th of
-September, and died a few days after at Ostend, where he was interred
-under the flagstaff by some of his own company.
-
-A portion of the corps was employed in October in the defence of
-Nieuport, but in what manner cannot now be ascertained. Indeed, from the
-paucity of information, either verbal or documentary, rendering it
-impracticable to trace, with anything like distinctness, the services
-and movements of the military artificers during the remainder of this
-and the subsequent campaigns in the Low Countries, unsatisfactory gaps
-will necessarily appear in this narrative at times, when the most
-interesting details might have been expected.
-
-Whilst the siege of Nieuport was progressing, Sir Charles Grey with his
-expedition arrived at Ostend, and learning the critical situation of the
-garrison determined to relieve it; but no sooner had he made
-arrangements for doing so, than the enemy retired and left the fortress
-and the field in quiet possession of the allies. To Sir Charles Grey’s
-force was attached 2 non-commissioned officers and 28 artificers, under
-Colonel Elias Durnford, royal engineers, drafted from England, with
-which number the corps in Flanders was augmented to 182 of all ranks.
-Winter setting in soon after, and the strife in the Low Countries being
-suspended for the season, a company was recalled from thence, and, on
-arrival at Spithead, sailed with the fleet for active service in the
-West Indies.
-
-In September, a detachment of 1 sergeant—Edward Smith—2 corporals, and
-about 20 privates, were selected from Captain Nepean’s company at
-Gibraltar, and sailed with the armament under General O’Hara for Toulon
-on board H.M. ships ‘Egmont’ and ‘Terrible.’[91] The officers of
-engineers with the party were Captain Nepean and Lieutenant De Butts. On
-landing, the men were detached in twos and threes to the different
-points of defence around Toulon; and their duties consisted in
-directing, under the general superintendence of their officers, the
-several working parties employed in constructing the batteries, &c. In
-the various actions and operations at this place, the detachment was
-more or less engaged, and “all were most zealous, active, and
-distinguished in their several capacities.” Some were wounded; and in
-the desperate defence of Fort Mulgrave, three were killed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- Private Joshua Cook, of the Woolwich company, was sent to Toulon as
- orderly to Colonel D’Aubant, royal engineers, and served in that
- capacity in Toulon and Corsica until the Colonel returned with him to
- England.
-
------
-
-At this fort, private Samuel Myers, who had previously served at the
-siege of Gibraltar, was conspicuous in his exertions under Lieutenant
-John Duncan, royal artillery, assistant engineer. At one of the guns all
-the artillerymen were either killed or disabled, for the post was a
-dangerous one; and the gun was consequently silent, though in a position
-to do much service. Observing this, Myers, having given general
-instructions to those who were under him as to the manner in which they
-were to perform their work, repaired with some volunteers to the battery
-and manned the gun. For a considerable time he laid and fired it himself
-with a precision and effect that checked the fierceness of the enemy’s
-cannonade, and attracted the notice of General Dundas. Highly approving
-of the zeal and gallantry of the self-constituted gunner, the General
-made him a corporal on the spot, and would have honoured him with a
-higher rank, only it was found that the custom of the corps did not
-admit of this distinction being conferred. Throughout the remaining
-period of the defence, Myers divided his attention between this gun and
-the works, attending to both with an ardour and fearlessness that gained
-him much praise. Early in the next year he was killed in Corsica.
-
-Two of the English companies out of six having already been sent abroad,
-and the nature of our relations with France rendering it highly probable
-that more would be demanded, the Duke of Richmond represented to his
-Majesty the benefit that would result to the service, if a corps of
-artificers and labourers were formed expressly for employment abroad.
-His Grace the more readily recommended this measure, as the various
-stations from which detachments were sent were compelled to hire civil
-tradesmen to supply their places, at wages considerably higher than the
-estimates warranted; and whilst it checked improvement in the labourers,
-which his Grace was anxious to see developed, it also crippled, in some
-degree, the general efficiency of the companies. Concurring, therefore,
-in his Grace’s proposition, His Majesty granted a warrant under date the
-11th September, 1793, for raising a corps of royal military artificers
-and labourers, to consist of four companies and to be distributed as
-follows:—
-
- Flanders 2 companies
- West Indies 1 ”
- Upper Canada 1 ”
-
-The command and composition of the companies were to be similar in every
-respect to the English companies; they were to be stationary in the
-countries where they were appointed to serve; and the men were to
-receive the like advantages in pay, allowances, and clothing. A distinct
-position would seem to have been given to these foreign companies by the
-warrant, but they nevertheless, though designated _a corps_, were
-comprehended with the English companies in one united body, and depended
-upon the latter companies for the maintenance of their strength and
-efficiency. Such, however, it may be observed, was not the case with the
-companies at Gibraltar, which yet remained a separate and independent
-body, though differing from the home and foreign companies only in
-non-essentials of a local character.
-
-The warrant just alluded to does not appear to have been carried out in
-the manner intended. Instead of sending a reinforcement to Flanders to
-complete the companies there to the authorized establishment, one
-company was withdrawn from thence and sent to the West Indies; while as
-regarded the latter station, in addition to the company ordered, a party
-also embarked with it, forming, with the detachment already in those
-islands, the nucleus of a second company. The total number of artificers
-and labourers in Flanders, after this change, was 82 of all ranks, and
-in the West Indies 126. On what ground this reversionary alteration was
-adopted is not precisely known; but it may reasonably be assigned to the
-pressing appeals from the West Indies for more men, and the inactive
-position of affairs in the Low Countries permitting it to be effected
-without detriment to the service. The company for Canada was never
-embodied, though the idea of forming it was cherished until December
-1798, when it was abandoned.
-
-At the end of the year the establishment and strength of the corps were
-as under:—
-
- Home companies 600
- Foreign companies 400
- Total 1000 establishment
- ——
- Strength 588
- ——
- Wanting to complete 412
- ====
-
-
-
-
- 1794—1795.
-
-Working dress—Company sails for West Indies—Martinique—Spirited
- conduct of a detachment
- there—Guadaloupe—Mortality—Toulon—Flanders—Reinforcement to company
- there—Return of the company—Works at Gravesend—Irregularities in the
- corps—Causes—Redeeming qualities—Appointment of Regimental Adjutant
- and Sergeant-major—Consequences—Woolwich becomes the
- head-quarters—Alteration in working dress.
-
-
-This year the working dress of the corps was considerably modified. The
-raven-duck frock was succeeded by a plain round blue jacket for winter,
-and a raven-duck jacket for summer. The colour of the working hat was
-changed for the privates from black to white; and the corporals and
-sergeants were distinguished from the inferior ranks by a band of gold
-lace round the pole of the hat at the bottom. See Plate VI.
-
-The company from Flanders under Colonel Elias Durnford, royal engineers,
-intended for service in the West Indies, rendezvoused for a time at
-Spithead. While there, every care was taken to make it as efficient for
-active duty as possible; and several men who were suffering from the
-fatigues of the sieges of Dunkirk and Nieuport, were accordingly
-re-embarked and their places supplied by others from the Portsmouth and
-Gosport companies. After being provided with the necessary field
-equipment, the company sailed with the fleet from Spithead on the 3rd
-November, 1793, and arrived at Barbadoes the 6th January, 1794. Its
-strength on landing was ninety-four of all ranks, including its
-sergeant-major—Matthew Hoey.[92]
-
------
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- Served seven years in the Royal Marines. Enlisted in the corps April
- 28, 1788, and was present in almost every action and capture which
- took place in the West Indies up to the year of his decease, which
- occurred at Barbadoes, July 14, 1810. Few non-commissioned officers
- had a more stirring career, or greater chances, by his prizes,
- employments, and successful speculations, of acquiring wealth. Much he
- gained and much he spent. He had his horses and his servants. Costly
- ornaments he wore with eastern profusion, and the hilt of his rapier,
- and the mountings of his scabbard, were of silver. Indeed it requires
- a couplet from Pope to do him anything like justice.
-
- “A radiant baldrick o’er his shoulders tied
- Sustain’d the sword that glitter’d at his side.”
-
------
-
-From Barbadoes the company proceeded with the expedition under General
-Sir Charles Grey and Admiral Sir John Jervis to Martinique; and having
-landed, commenced and completed, during the night of the 10th February,
-the erection of the required batteries on Mount Matherine against Pigeon
-Island. On the surrender of this island on the morning of the 11th, a
-portion of the company, under Lieutenants Fletcher and Durnford, royal
-engineers, was formed in line with a brigade of the royal artillery and
-a part of the 70th regiment, to protect the stores then landing, and to
-support the left of the army in the attack upon the heights of Souririe.
-The post was soon carried; and the entire company subsequently
-participated very essentially in the siege of Fort Bourbon. After a
-month’s unceasing exertion before that fort, it was captured on the 25th
-March, and Martinique then became the prize of Britain. In noticing the
-services of the company, Sir Charles Grey, in his despatch of 25th
-March, writes:—“Colonel Durnford, with the corps of engineers, have also
-a claim to my warmest approbation for their exertions in placing and
-constructing the batteries.” The casualties were one killed—private
-William Simpson, on the 11th February at Pigeon Island—and three
-wounded.[93]
-
------
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- ‘London Gazette Extraordinary,’ April 17th and 22nd, 1794.
-
------
-
-After the successful attack on Souririe, corporal James Kerr of the
-royal military artificers, and a detachment of the company under his
-orders, were employed on field duty at noon-day in front of the army. A
-very superior force of the enemy attempted to surprise them, but as soon
-as they perceived their danger, they retired and defended themselves in
-so steady, spirited, and soldierlike a manner, as to command the
-admiration of many officers and others.
-
-Nearly the whole of the company were subsequently employed in the
-reduction of the Islands of St. Lucia and Guadaloupe; but what services
-were rendered by them in those captures have not been recorded.
-
-Sir Charles Grey, having succeeded in the enterprise with which he was
-intrusted, left Major-General Dundas in command at Guadaloupe and made
-arrangements to return home. The fever peculiar to the country, soon
-afterwards made its appearance in the island and the General died.
-Taking advantage of this event and the daily increasing sickness, the
-French rose against the British and retook Fort Fleur d’Epée. Sir
-Charles Grey, hearing of the disaster and anticipating its consequences,
-returned with all haste to Guadaloupe and resumed the command of the
-troops. At this time the company was divided into almost equal
-proportions at each of the subjugated islands, to assist in carrying on
-the various works. Thirty-one non-commissioned officers and men had been
-left at Guadaloupe on its capture under Lieutenants Dowse and Durnford,
-royal engineers; but at the period of the outbreak only twenty-one men
-were present, ten having already died of the fever.
-
-At Guadaloupe the military artificers were employed in the repairs of
-magazines and barracks, and in the construction of field works at
-Basseterre: subsequently they superintended the erection of batteries,
-&c., against Point à Pitre in the endeavours to recover Grandeterre; but
-as all attempts to regain this branch of the island were now abandoned,
-the detachment retreated to Berville with the army for the purpose of
-preventing Basseterre falling into the hands of the enemy. Here the
-artificers were engaged in various works for the defence of the camp,
-and shared in repulsing the three attacks made on the position in
-September and October. By climate, fatigue, and privation, their numbers
-gradually dwindled away; and when the post was captured on the 7th
-October, only ten men were living. Six of these were taken
-prisoners,[94] with Lieutenant Durnford of the engineers; and the other
-four, under Lieutenant Evatt, R.E., served at the defence of Fort
-Matilda from the 14th October to the 10th December, the date of its
-evacuation.[95] During that protracted struggle, the services of these
-four men, especially sergeant John Morris and private Samuel Bowes, were
-found to be particularly useful in every respect. Such was the opinion
-of Lieutenant Evatt, who, fifty years after, also afforded a general
-testimony to the merits of the company, by stating that “wherever their
-services were required they were ever conspicuously forward.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- Privates William Burrell, John Clark, Abraham Mayhead, Robert
- Torrince, William Fleming, and Thomas Wagg. Four of the number soon
- died; and the two first, on being released, joined the remnant of the
- company at St. Domingo on the 18th April, 1796.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 13751. 10-14 February, 1795.
-
------
-
-The yellow fever continued its ravages throughout the year with
-frightful violence, and carried off more than half of the company. In
-May the sickness was very general among the artificers. That month
-twenty-five died; and of the survivors, very few were found sufficiently
-effective for the service of the works. In June, the party at St. Lucia,
-which so far had escaped the prevailing scourge, was removed to
-Martinique to hasten the restoration of Fort Bourbon. But little
-advantage, however, was obtained by this arrangement, as nearly the
-whole of the men were immediately seized by the sickness. At the close
-of the year sixty-five non-commissioned officers and privates had died;
-of whom forty-two were at Martinique and twenty-three at Guadaloupe; as
-also Colonel Durnford, Captain Chilcot, and Lieutenants Dowse and Lawson
-of the royal engineers. The strength of the company was now reduced to
-twenty-six of all ranks, including the prisoners of war, but the
-effectives of this number did not exceed ten.
-
-Toulon was evacuated in the middle of December, 1793, and the remnant of
-the army employed there soon afterwards landed in Corsica. With this
-force the detachment of military artificers shared in the various
-actions and sieges of that island, particularly at San Fiorenzo, Bastia,
-Ajaccio, and Calvi. In directing the construction of the required works
-and batteries, more especially at the lengthened siege of Calvi, their
-services were highly spoken of by their officers and the assistant
-engineers under whose instructions they for the most part acted; and
-though so few in number, they were considered by the army to be most
-useful and valuable soldiers.[96] Most of them were killed at San
-Fiorenzo and Calvi, and the rest were wounded; of whom two privates only
-survived. These two men, previously to the evacuation of Corsica in
-October, 1796, were present at the capture of the Island of Elba, and in
-January, 1797, returned with Lieutenant De Butts, royal engineers, to
-Gibraltar.
-
------
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Lieutenant John Duncan, royal artillery, who was employed as assistant
- engineer in the sieges of Toulon and Corsica, “often spoke,” writes
- Lieutenant-General Birch, of the royal engineers, under date 22nd
- August, 1848, “with the very utmost enthusiasm of the conduct of the
- royal military artificers in these operations, and would delight to
- dwell in describing their conduct as being fine, brave, and enduring.”
-
------
-
-Hostilities were resumed in Flanders as soon as the severity of the
-winter had subsided. To compel the French to evacuate Flanders was now
-the purpose of the allied commanders. To this end, on the 16th May, the
-whole force made a forward movement. The column under the Duke of York,
-to which the company of artificers was attached, marched to Lannoy and
-then to Roubaix driving the enemy before it. On the 18th May the French,
-making a determined stand, hotly pressed the British in front and rear
-by an overwhelming force, and obliged his Royal Highness to resort to
-the daring alternative of retreating through the enemy’s line, which he
-accomplished, but with great loss. In this action the artificers had
-four wounded, one missing—private John Smart—and seven taken
-prisoners.[97]
-
------
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- Privates Alexander Williamson, Archibald Douglas, Alexander Stewart,
- Andrew Lindsay, David Morton, George Horn, and John Bristo.
-
------
-
-The Earl of Moira being appointed to command a corps intended to act on
-the offensive against France, one sergeant, one corporal, twenty-one
-artificers, and eight labourers of the home companies were selected to
-accompany it. Early in January the detachment was forwarded to
-Southampton and there encamped for several months, drilling with the
-troops. Ultimately the destination of the expedition was changed, and
-his lordship was directed to co-operate with the Duke of York. The
-armament forthwith embarked, and sailing for Ostend, landed on the 26th
-June. After a march of more than thirty days, executed with cheerful
-resignation, the Earl of Moira effected a junction with the Duke of
-York’s column at a time when, from the precarious situation of his Royal
-Highness, an addition to his resources was imperatively needed. The
-detachment of artificers with his lordship now joined Captain Mann’s
-company, the strength of which, since the opening of the winter of the
-previous year, had been reduced by deaths from eighty-two to seventy.
-With the present increase the total of the corps in Holland amounted to
-101 of all ranks; but of this number, many were no longer equal to the
-fatigues of a campaign owing to the diseases contracted by them, from
-unavoidable exposure, during a season of unusual inclemency; and several
-suffering from incurable frostbites were placed in the category of
-wounded men.
-
-On the 12th May, 1795, the above company, transferred to the command of
-Captain Johnson of the engineers, arrived at Woolwich. Its strength was
-eighty-six, including its sergeant-major. Being no longer required for
-foreign duty, the men were distributed among the Portsmouth and Gosport
-companies and the Guernsey and Jersey half companies. Twelve were left
-at Lisle sick and prisoners of war: three of them died, seven returned
-to England at different periods and the other two—Private George Horn
-and John Bristo—continued to be recorded as prisoners until February,
-1797; when, not having rejoined their corps, they were struck off the
-strength. By the reduction of the Flanders company the establishment of
-the corps was diminished from 1,000 to 800 of all ranks.
-
-About this period, a detachment of one sergeant, thirty-three
-carpenters, and two drummers, under Captain C. Holloway, royal
-engineers, was sent to Gravesend to make various repairs and additions
-to the defences on the shores of the Thames, as the state of European
-politics and our unsettled relations with France rendered these
-precautionary measures absolutely indispensable. They were picked men,
-of good qualification; and to distinguish them from the corps employed
-at Woolwich, Purfleet, and Chatham, were permitted to wear a very long
-fantastic feather of black, topped with crimson. Tilbury Fort and the
-Blockhouse at Gravesend were thoroughly repaired by this detachment, and
-the requisite arrangements and appliances for establishing a
-communication across the Thames, by means of barges for the passage of
-an army, were effected by them. They also constructed two batteries for
-four 24-pounders each, with temporary wooden barracks for artillerymen
-at Shornmead and Hop-Point, below Gravesend. These services were barely
-finished when thirty of the detachment were recalled to join the
-expeditions for St. Domingo and the Caribbee Islands. The party that
-remained, was shortly afterwards increased to one sergeant and fifteen
-carpenters. Detachments of varied strength were also employed in
-strengthening the defences on the coast of Sussex, and in repairing the
-castles at Hurst, Cowes, and Yarmouth.
-
-Drunkenness and irregularity were now very prevalent in the corps. Many
-of the men, from their abandoned habits, were insensible either to
-advice or punishment: whilst others, whose moral conduct could not be
-reproached, were negligent of that proper respect for personal
-cleanliness and appearance which is one of the first considerations of a
-soldier in every well-regulated regiment. In some degree to check these
-evils, a few of the most incorrigible among the labourers were dismissed
-from the corps, or were either turned over to the navy or sent to the
-West Indies. But even these severe but necessary measures failed to
-produce that wholesome impression on the habitual delinquents, which it
-was reasonable to anticipate would be the result.
-
-The first symptoms of disorder in the conduct of the men appeared when
-they found they were liable to be sent abroad if occasion required their
-services. Led by their constitution and employment to consider
-themselves permanently settled, they were quite unprepared for any
-innovation which had a tendency to subvert their position or to
-interrupt the advancement of their individual interests. The married men
-particularly received it with unequivocal dissatisfaction. Unwilling to
-submit to the change, which struck at the root of their privileges,
-several deserted; and others, not daring to involve themselves in the
-consequences of so serious a step, remained only to drown their
-discontent in dissipation, and bring discredit on the corps.
-
-This was not the only source of demoralization. Ever since the formation
-of the corps little or no attention had been paid to its military
-efficiency. Discipline was almost entirely relinquished, and drill was
-an unfashionable exercise. The former was relaxed on account of the men
-being regarded more in the light of civilians than soldiers, and the
-latter was nominally given up on the plea, that it was of far greater
-public benefit to keep them constantly on the works than at drill. From
-the leniency of the one, numbers paid but little regard to authority on
-military matters, and were only too ready to evince a spirit of
-disaffection when anything occurred to infringe upon liberties or
-privileges that the usages of the corps had given them a sort of right
-to enjoy; and from the neglect of the other, they were awkward and dirty
-in appearance and slovenly in their attire. By the many well-intentioned
-and orderly men in the corps, the laxity of the discipline and
-infrequency of the drill were certainly recognized and appreciated as
-indulgences; but the advantages bestowed were more than counterbalanced
-by the evils they induced; for several men—not labourers only, but
-artificers—distinguished by their abilities as tradesmen, but too
-depraved to profit by the mildness of the discipline, plunged into all
-the excesses of disorder and drunkenness. Yet, with all this misconduct
-and want of training in soldierlike principle and bearing, they always
-exhibited an active pride in their fair name as mechanics, and
-committed, comparatively, but few offences on the works.
-
-Another element in producing the irregularity complained of is traceable
-to the manner in which the corps was recruited. From the difficulty of
-obtaining good tradesmen with satisfactory testimonials of previous
-conduct, the pernicious system of receiving men without characters was
-resorted to. Ability as tradesmen was the great specific, conduct being
-a non-essential qualification. Consequently, in the removals from the
-line especially, many men were transferred to the military artificers,
-whose dissolute habits rendered their influence both mischievous and
-demoralizing, although, from their merits as mechanics, they were found
-far too valuable to dismiss, and too useful to be subjected to a
-protracted punishment.
-
-But with all this dissipation and disorder there was much in the corps
-to approve, much to admire. The non-commissioned officers, the majority
-of the artificers, and a goodly number of the labourers were
-well-conducted men, and upheld their military character and appearance
-in a becoming manner. On the works, besides being able and expert
-artificers, they were found to be industrious and efficient, supporting
-and assisting their officers in every duty or enterprise of difficulty
-or danger with readiness and zeal. Though differing from other troops in
-many essential points, still there was much sterling worth in the royal
-military artificers, rarely to be met with in any other corps in the
-service.
-
-Recourse to discipline and drill seemed to be the only chance of
-preventing the increase of irregularity, and of permanently improving
-the character and condition of the corps. At each of the stations the
-experiment was now in partial operation, but, simultaneously with this
-judicious effort, another measure had been effected which promised to be
-of material advantage in bringing about the desired change. This was the
-appointment, on the 15th May, of Lieutenant John Rowley of the royal
-engineers, to be Regimental Adjutant to the corps. To each company, from
-its formation, an adjutant had been and continued to be attached; who,
-however, from the paramount importance of the works and other
-circumstances, was too engrossed by his attention to professional duties
-and details to be of much service to his company. The Regimental
-Adjutant was stationed at Woolwich, and through him was carried on all
-the correspondence of the corps. His office, however, was at
-Westminster. To assist him, therefore, company sergeant-major Anthony
-Haig, who was an excellent drill-master and a talented non-commissioned
-officer, was promoted to be regimental sergeant-major on the Staff at
-Woolwich with the pay of 3_s._ a-day.
-
-These appointments were immediately followed by an alteration in the
-system of recruiting as conducted by the officers commanding companies.
-Experience had proved that such a system was detrimental to the corps,
-and that its discontinuance would narrow the sources from which some of
-the existing evils originated and were fed. With this view, the
-particular charge of the service was intrusted to the Regimental
-Adjutant. Recruits were now enlisted for general service, and when ready
-to join the corps, were, in the first instance, sent to Woolwich. On
-their arrival they were clothed, equipped, and subjected to the same
-drilling as infantry soldiers under the sergeant-major and adjutant;
-and, when trained, were posted to the companies, whether at home or
-abroad, most in want of men. Even this slight modification produced a
-more than corresponding improvement in the corps, and revived in some
-degree, at the different stations, the discipline and drill. At
-Portsmouth especially, at a later period, under Colonel Evelegh, who was
-the first Adjutant of the corps and served with its companies at the
-siege of Gibraltar—the disciplinary arrangements were so satisfactorily
-enforced and sustained, that it was a custom for some years to remove
-all the irregular men to that station, to place them under the operation
-of a strict and wholesome surveillance. A few years after, about 1806,
-to give the corps the advantage of manœuvring in masses, the
-companies at Portsmouth and Gosport, with all the subaltern officers in
-command, were, once a week during the summer months, brought together
-for drill under their respective Adjutants—Lieutenants Hamilton and
-Oldfield.
-
-Woolwich now became the head-quarters of the corps, and all invalids
-were ever after sent to it from the different stations for discharge,
-instead of being disposed of, as heretofore, by the captains of
-companies.
-
-This year the working jacket was somewhat altered. Broad skirts with
-pocket slashes were appended to it, and, for the sake of giving a more
-military appearance to the men, a yellow worsted lace triangle was sown
-between the two back buttons, and a frog was added to each side of the
-collar. These ornaments on the sergeant’s jacket were of gold lace. The
-hats of the privates were changed from white to black felt, and the
-sergeants, in addition to the gold band, wore rosettes and crimson
-plumes. See Plate VII. All ranks wore clothing of precisely similar
-fabric.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate VII.
- WORKING DRESS 1755 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 1795-1796.
-
-Companies to St. Domingo and the Caribbee Islands—Reduction of St.
- Lucia—Conduct of company there—Gallantry in forming lodgment and
- converting it into a battery—Attack on Bombarde—Distribution and
- conduct of St. Domingo company—Mortality in the West Indies—Detachment
- to Halifax, Nova Scotia—Dougal Hamilton—Detachments to Calshot Castle
- and St. Marcou.
-
-
-War, coupled with fever, had by this time made considerable havoc among
-the troops in the West Indies, and reduced the force to a number totally
-inadequate for the services of the different islands, much less to
-resist efficiently the encroachments of a vigilant enemy, and check the
-insurrectionary demonstrations of a disaffected negro population. In
-some respects to supply this deficiency, reinforcements having been
-applied for, two expeditions were fitted out at Spithead, and sailed in
-November, 1795, under Sir Ralph Abercrombie, for St. Domingo and the
-Windward Islands.
-
-To each expedition a company of sixty non-commissioned officers and men
-of the military artificers were attached, equipped with tools
-appropriate to their trades, in addition to their arms. The company for
-St. Domingo, under Lieutenant Crozier, royal engineers, was formed by
-men drafted from the Woolwich and Chatham companies; and that for the
-Caribbee Islands, under Lieutenant Gravatt, R.E., by men from the
-Gosport, Portsmouth, and Plymouth companies.
-
-Both companies arrived—after a long and dangerous passage, particularly
-in clearing the Channel—in March, 1796. In disposing of the two
-companies, Sir Ralph despatched, under Lieutenant Crozier, thirty-three
-non-commissioned officers and privates, including two men who had been
-prisoners of war at Guadaloupe, to St. Domingo, detaining the remainder
-to act under himself with the Caribbean company, which now reached the
-strength of seventy-seven of all ranks.
-
-The reduction of St. Lucia was early the intention of Sir Ralph, and the
-expedition accordingly sailed thither. The company of artificers, under
-the command of Captain Hay, royal engineers, landed on the 26th April,
-and at once were told off for the duties of the siege. In addition to
-the construction of some extensive batteries to act against Morne
-Fortuné, they superintended the formation of a communication by means of
-a new road from Choc Bay to the Morne. By the 24th May the English had
-pushed up to within 500 yards of the fort, and the garrison capitulated
-on the 26th May.
-
-From the nature of the ground and other circumstances, the operations
-for the reduction of the fort were extraordinary and arduous, and the
-exertions of the company conspicuous. These attracted the notice of Sir
-Ralph, who, through the medium of Captain Hay, conveyed his thanks to
-the military artificers for their good conduct and soldierlike behaviour
-at the siege.
-
-In the attack on the enemy’s advanced posts at Morne Fortuné on the 24th
-May, a detachment of about twenty noncommissioned officers and men of
-the company, under Lieutenant Fletcher, R.E., with handspikes, axes, and
-picks, rushed gallantly forward and formed a lodgment, which was rapidly
-converted into a battery of five 24-pounders to breach the body of the
-place. The exertions of this party greatly contributed to the success of
-the assault and to the fall of St Lucia. Lieutenant Fletcher was
-wounded, as also two rank and file.[98] Of the other casualties in the
-company from the opening of the siege to the assault no record has been
-preserved.
-
------
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- ‘London Gazette Extraordinary,’ July 4th, 1796.
-
------
-
-The detachment of thirty-three non-commissioned officers and men, under
-Lieutenant Crozier, R.E., arrived at Cape Nichola Mole, St. Domingo, on
-the 2nd May, and Captain W. M‘Kerras, royal engineers, assumed the
-command of it. On the 8th June following, about twenty of the party were
-engaged in the attack on Bombarde, in which one private—John
-M‘Donald—was mortally wounded, and one sergeant—Hugh Taylor—was taken
-prisoner.[99] On the 11th June, the St. Domingo detachment was further
-increased by the arrival from St. Lucia of one sergeant and fourteen
-privates under Lieutenant Stewart.
-
------
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 23rd to 26th July, 1796; takes notice of the private
- wounded, but not of the sergeant taken prisoner.
-
------
-
-Of the ulterior active services of this detachment, nothing can be
-satisfactorily traced. It was, seemingly, broken up into small parties,
-and disposed of at St. Marc, Jeremie, Grande Ance, the Mole, and Port au
-Prince, superintending under their officers, the execution of various
-works which were deemed essential for defence, on account of the arrival
-at Cape François of Rochambeau, Santhonax, and several other republicans
-of consequence. In these and former works the men seem to have exerted
-themselves with zeal, and to have obtained commendation for their good
-conduct. “Indeed, I must say,” writes Captain M‘Kerras to Sir William
-Green, the chief engineer, under date July, 1796, “that I have never
-seen a better set of people in every respect and manner than they were.”
-
-To a great extent the fever still prevailed in the West Indies, and had
-raged fearfully during the months of June and July. It was not confined
-to any particular island, but was general throughout the group. Never
-had a more melancholy scene of mortality attended any expedition than
-befel those to St. Domingo and the Windward Islands. Of the company of
-military artificers at the former island, twenty-five had died in June
-and July alone, and by the end of the year it was reduced to nineteen
-men only. The Caribbee Islands' company, during the same period,
-suffered still more severely; inasmuch as it was diminished from
-seventy-seven to thirty-one of all ranks; whilst the company that served
-at the captures of Martinique, St. Lucia, and Gaudaloupe, in 1794, had
-frittered away by deaths and invaliding to eighteen non-commissioned
-officers and men.[100] Of the survivors more than half were
-incapacitated for duty from sickness, and, consequently, the services of
-the department pressed very heavily upon the effectives. On the 1st
-September the remnants of the two latter companies were amalgamated, and
-reached a total of 49 of all ranks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- Lieutenant, afterwards Lieutenant-General, Evatt, who served with the
- company in Sir Charles Grey’s campaign of 1794, writes thus of it:
- “The dreadful sickness then prevailing left few or none of the men
- after its conclusion, and it might with truth be said, they came out,
- did their duty, and died!”
-
------
-
-In June a detachment of one sergeant, two corporals and twenty
-artificers, embarked for Halifax, Nova Scotia, where the classes of
-tradesmen most needed for the works could not be obtained except at
-extravagantly high wages. Some care was therefore taken to select
-mechanics fully equal to the requirements of the settlement. The
-detachment landed in September following, and Captain James Straton,
-commanding royal engineer, was appointed to command it. Various works
-were in progress at the time of their arrival, to which they were
-distributed according to circumstances; but the service upon which they
-were chiefly employed was the erection of the lighthouse in Halifax
-harbour. Over this work, private Dougal Hamilton, a very intelligent and
-skilful mason, was appointed foreman, and acquitted himself throughout
-with credit. Subsequently, when about to quit the province as an
-invalid, H.R.H. Prince Edward ordered his immediate disembarcation, and
-placed him at the disposal of the treasurer of the settlement, by whom
-he was employed as a foreman in building the Shelburne Lighthouse on the
-coast of Halifax.
-
-Early in the spring a party of the Portsmouth company was detached to
-Calshot Castle to repair and strengthen it; and another from the
-Guernsey half company, to renew the defences at the Island of St.
-Marcou. In carrying on the works at the latter place, privates Roger
-Hambly and Hugh M‘Laughlin were dreadfully wounded by the explosion of a
-mine in the execution of their duty.
-
-
-
-
- 1797.
-
-Detachments to Portugal—To Dover—Transfers to the Artillery—Enlistment
- of artificers only—Incorporation of Gibraltar companies with the
- corps—Capture of Trinidad—Draft to West Indies—Failure at Porto
- Rico—Fording the lagoon, by private D. Sinclair—Private W. Rogers at
- the bridge St. Julien—Saves his officer—Casualties by fever in
- Caribbean company—Filling up company at St. Domingo with
- negroes—Mutinies in the fleet at Portsmouth—Conduct of Plymouth
- company—Émeute in the Royal Artillery, Woolwich—Increase of
- pay—Marquis Cornwallis’s approbation of the corps—Mutiny at the
- Nore—Consequent removal of detachment to Gravesend—Alterations in
- dress.
-
-
-Early in January, Lieutenant F. W. Mulcaster, R.E., with a party of one
-sergeant, one corporal, five artificers, and four labourers of the
-Woolwich company, embarked for Portugal to join the force under the
-command of Lieutenant-General Charles Stuart, which was sent to that
-country for the purpose of preventing its invasion by the armies of
-France or Spain. The nature of the service did not call for any display
-of character, and the detachment being withdrawn in October 1798,
-immediately proceeded with the expedition to Minorca.
-
-In February one corporal and seven miners of the Plymouth company were
-detached to Dover to carry on the mining operations at that station
-under Captain H. Bruyeres, R.E. They were farther increased in October
-to two corporals, eleven artificers, ten labourers, and one drummer, as
-well to conduct the mining as to assist in repairing the works on the
-Western Heights. A detachment was also sent from this company to
-Berryhead near Torbay, to erect fortifications.
-
-A great deficiency occurring in the numerical establishment of the royal
-artillery, the Master-General desired that as many of the labourers of
-the corps of artificers as were anxious to avail themselves of the
-opportunity of transferring their services to that regiment, should be
-permitted to do so. The transferring continued from March to May, and
-the corps was thus reduced sixty-seven men, each of whom received one
-guinea on being accepted by the Artillery.[101]
-
------
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- One of these labourers, John Alexander, enlisted in the Chatham
- company 15th July, 1796, and was transferred 1st April, 1797. Forty
- years afterwards he was commissioned as quartermaster in the royal
- horse artillery, and after eleven years' service in that rank, retired
- on full-pay in 1847, and died in 1854.
-
------
-
-This reduction in the establishment of the labourers was followed in
-August by an order, that the recruiting for the corps should be limited
-to the artificer part only. Labourers and men not bred to the regulated
-trades were no longer enlisted, and every artificer so enlisting only
-received the bounty and subsistence of a labourer, until he had been
-approved as a competent artificer. This was a wholesome precaution, as
-those enlisted under the assumed name of mechanics were continued as
-labourers, until industry and improvement had rendered them worthy of
-advancement.
-
-In June the soldier-artificer corps at Gibraltar was incorporated with
-the royal military artificers. Ever since its formation in 1772 it had
-held a distinct position, and was an integral body of itself. Its
-establishment was two companies of 5 sergeants, 5 corporals, 2 drummers,
-and 125 private artificers each, with 1 sergeant-major to both
-companies; but its actual strength on the amalgamation was only 255 of
-all ranks. In the regular monotonous routine of that garrison there was
-little occasion for their services except as artificers. At this period
-their conduct was far from commendable. Much addicted to drunkenness,
-they were the constant subjects of courts-martial; but on the works,
-under the eye of their officers, they behaved well and were very good
-mechanics, particularly the non-commissioned officers, who, besides,
-were skilful foremen. By the incorporation of these companies with the
-corps, it was increased from 801 to 1,075 of all ranks; but its actual
-strength only reached 759 men.
-
-Sir Ralph Abercrombie having resolved to make an attempt on the island
-of Trinidad, an expedition under himself and Admiral Harvey sailed
-accordingly from Martinique on the 12th February. To this force were
-attached one sergeant-major, two corporals, and nineteen artificers,
-under Major Charles Shipley, and Lieutenants Gravatt and Lefebure, royal
-engineers. From an accident by fire, which consumed the enemy’s ships on
-the night preceding the morning arranged for the attack, the island
-became an easy conquest and surrendered by capitulation on the 18th
-February.
-
-Soon after the taking of this island, a detachment under Lieutenant
-Ford, R.E., of three sergeants, two corporals, and twenty privates,
-drafted from the Portsmouth company, landed and joined Major Shipley’s
-company at Martinique, the strength of which, with the increase,
-amounted to sixty-five of all ranks.
-
-Sir Ralph Abercrombie and Admiral Harvey now assembled an expedition
-against Porto Rico and landed there on the 17th April. The company of
-artificers furnished about forty non-commissioned officers and men for
-this service, including Lieutenant Ford’s party. Here they constructed,
-assisted by a party of the 14th regiment, two batteries, one for mortars
-and the other for guns. A large magazine abandoned by the enemy, was
-also partially converted into a battery for two mortars, but its
-completion was relinquished in consequence of the ordnance intended to
-arm the battery having been swamped in a morass in crossing.
-Notwithstanding the exertions made to reduce the place, the enterprise
-failed, and the troops were withdrawn on the 30th April. Previously,
-however, to effecting the evacuation, the artificers, to prevent the
-enemy following in the retreat, destroyed the bridge which connected the
-island of St. Julien with the main; and afterwards hastily reared a
-breastwork of sandbags to cover the embarkation, which, however, was not
-required, as the expedition was suffered to leave the island unmolested.
-The casualties in the military artificers were five privates killed,
-viz., Joseph Featherstone, George Clark, Samuel Hague, George Winter,
-and John Cameron, and four severely wounded; besides about twenty more
-who sustained slight contusions or mutilations.[102]
-
------
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- In the ‘London Gazette,’ 3rd to 6th June, 1797, the killed only are
- noticed.
-
------
-
-Among the measures suggested for reducing Porto Rico was one for taking
-the town, by forcing the troops through the lagoon bounding the east
-side of the island. Before the project could be entertained, it was
-considered advisable to ascertain if the stream were fordable. An
-officer of Sir Ralph’s staff having requested permission to undertake
-the service, he was voluntarily accompanied by private David Sinclair of
-the military artificers. In the night, at the appointed hour, both
-entered the lagoon together, each provided with a long staff. With this
-support they probed their adventurous way, and at length succeeded in
-gaining the opposite slope; where, standing near one of the redoubts
-which defended a broken bridge, they distinctly heard the vigilant
-sentinels talking and walking on their beats. With the same caution as
-before, they picked their course back again, and then coolly repeated
-the duty without the aid of props. The officer reported the ford to be
-fully practicable, and at the same time lauded the intrepidity of the
-soldier who accompanied him. Thereupon Sir Ralph praised him for his
-gallantry and rewarded him with a johannes—a piece of eight dollars. The
-idea of making the assault by passing the stream was given up, in
-consequence of the British force being too weak to cope with an enemy
-powerful in men and means, and almost impregnable in position. Sinclair
-died the 28th July, 1797, and during his short career in the West
-Indies, an officer under whom he served has left this testimony to his
-worth, “that he was ever conspicuous in every service.”
-
-Determined upon relinquishing Porto Rico, Sir Ralph ordered Lieutenant
-C. Lefebure, of the royal engineers, with a detachment of the
-artificers, early in the morning of the 30th April, to repair to the
-bridge which connected the island of St. Julien with the Main and
-demolish it, for the purpose of preventing the Spaniards following and
-harassing the army during the retreat. The bridge was an old crazy
-structure of stone consisting of nine arches. All were directed to work
-at the road-way of the centre arch, but to private William Rogers, at
-his particular request, was assigned the difficult and dangerous duty of
-dislodging the key stone. The ground was soon harrowed up, a gap made
-across the middle, several stones were removed from the pier-heads, and
-the bridge exhibited signs of instability. Nothing daunted, Rogers
-boldly stepped upon the crown of the arch, and after a few heavy blows
-with his pickaxe, scooped the stone from its bed. At once the arch gave
-way; and the others leaning towards it, cracked as though torn by an
-earthquake and fell beneath him. Rogers’s situation was one of imminent
-peril, but with a fearlessness that was remarkable, he plunged from the
-crumbling bridge into the stream, and was fortunately preserved from any
-serious harm, whilst five of his comrades were crushed to death by the
-fall; four also were severely wounded; and all the rest, save corporal
-William Robinson, were injured.
-
-Nor was this all. Rogers swam about the heap to afford help to those who
-were suffering and dying. It was yet dark, and the thick dust still
-rising from the fall, made the darkness denser. Groping, therefore,
-among the ruins, he found an individual who still had signs of life,
-struggling, ineffectually, to free himself from some massive fragments
-that entangled him. Rogers set to work to release the drowning man: this
-he quickly accomplished, and, swimming with his charge to the shore, the
-rescued turned out to be his own officer—Lieutenant Lefebure. The life
-of that gallant subaltern, however, was only prolonged to fall a
-sacrifice to his heroism on the walls of Matagorda in 1810. Rogers’s
-exertions were not confined to his officer only, for several of his
-comrades who were precipitated into the water and were unable to swim,
-he saved, assisted by those of the party who had sustained but trivial
-injuries.
-
-A desolating epidemic still raged in the Caribbee Islands and greatly
-diminished the numbers of the company. In November particularly, the
-climate was extremely hot and unhealthy and the deaths by fever
-considerable. During the year the casualties were, deaths, thirty-one,
-of which fifteen occurred in November; sent home invalided, six;
-deserted, two; total, thirty-nine; leaving the company, of all ranks,
-only thirty-three strong at the end of the year.
-
-At St. Domingo the great want of artificers for the service of the
-engineering department being severely felt, Captain McKerras, R.E., in
-February, represented the expediency of keeping up the company with
-negroes. The number of the military artificers then serving in the
-colony was nineteen of all ranks, a third of whom were constantly unfit
-for any kind of duty, suffering as they did from over exertion and
-frequent relapses of remitting fever. To Europeans the climate was “the
-most pernicious and abominable in the universe,” and none but the
-strongest could at all bear up against its influences. To fill up the
-vacancies in the company, therefore, by drafts of mechanics from
-England, would have incurred a heavy outlay without reaping a
-commensurate return. Considerations like these prompted Captain McKerras
-to suggest the measure, and he was further influenced by the conviction,
-that, since civil labour could not be procured in the colony unless at
-an enormous expense, that of the slave would, after receiving
-instructions from the present climatized artificers of the company, be
-found of great advantage to St. Domingo, and a vast saving to the
-public. The slave artificer was to receive food, clothing, and barrack
-accommodation, but no pay. Whatever attention may have been paid to the
-proposal, certain it is, that the company was never recruited by blacks.
-This probably arose from the island having been abandoned in the autumn
-of 1798.[103]
-
------
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- Sir Charles Pasley, in the prefatory notes to his work on ‘Elementary
- Fortification,’ vol. i., p. 4, writes of the inefficiency and
- misconduct of detachments sent on foreign service, and concludes his
- observations by saying, “I am told in the West Indies, it had actually
- been proposed to employ negroes as engineer soldiers.” If the above is
- the recommendation Sir Charles alludes to, he has either been
- misinformed of the reasons for that proposal, or he has mistaken them;
- for the detachment was composed of good non-commissioned officers and
- well-qualified artificers from the Woolwich and Chatham companies; and
- in the discharge of their several duties, gave every satisfaction to
- their officers. The proposal was dictated by humanity, as well as with
- a view to the prospective advantage of the public, and in no respect
- originated in the misbehaviour or inefficiency of the men.
-
------
-
-The memorable mutinies in the fleet at Spithead at this time were
-followed by the rising of some unprincipled men, who, as emissaries of
-revolt, traversed the country endeavouring by every device to shake the
-allegiance of the soldiery. Efforts of this kind were also attempted
-with the royal military artificers, particularly at the ports, but
-beyond a few desertions, without effect. Most of the companies publicly
-opposed these agencies; but the Plymouth company in an especial manner
-distinguished itself by its open and soldierlike activity against their
-disloyal exertions.
-
-The document,[104] printed by the company and widely circulated through
-Devonshire, was sent by Major-General Mercer, captain of the company, to
-Lord Cornwallis the Master-General; who expressed very great
-satisfaction with the loyal sentiments it avowed, and highly approved of
-the spirit and zeal of the men in giving the declaration publicity at so
-opportune a moment.
-
------
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- A copy of the document is subjoined:—
-
- Plymouth Lines, 31st May, 1797.
- We, the
- Non-commissioned Officers
- Of the Company of Royal Military
- Artificers and Labourers,
- Stationed at Plymouth Lines,
-
- Come forward at the unanimous request of the Company, to avow at this
- momentous crisis, our firm loyalty, attachment, and fidelity to our
- most gracious _Sovereign_ and our _Country_, and solemnly declare our
- firm determination to maintain subordination and discipline to our
- officers, with whom we have every reason to be fully satisfied, and
- request they will accept these, our most grateful acknowledgments for
- their humane attention towards us, and beg they will let this our
- determination be made known to the _Right Honourable General Lord
- George Henry Lennox_, Governor and Commander-in-Chief in this
- district.
-
- That, as we learn, there are men endeavouring to withdraw His
- Majesty’s _soldiers_ from the duty they owe to their _King_ and
- _Country_, we are determined should any such proceedings appear
- amongst us, to take the earliest opportunity of checking the same;
- and, as a mark of our attachment to our most gracious _Sovereign_ and
- glorious _Constitution_, we do hereby offer a reward of
-
- _Ten Guineas_,
-
- to any _soldier-artificer_, that will discover any person, or persons,
- offering them _money_, _seditious handbills_, or otherwise, with an
- intent to withdraw them from their duty, on conviction of the person,
- or persons, before a civil magistrate.
-
- God save the King!
- Witness our hands,
-
- (Signed) WM. BROWNE, Sergeant-major.
- ROBT. WAKEHAM, }
- WM. BURGESS, } Sergeants.
- JAS. MOIR, }
-
- JNO. EVELYN, }
- WM. HUTTON, } Corporals.
- WM. MCBEATH, }
-
- WM. COTTEY, }
- JOSH. WELLS, } Lance-corporals.
- WM. BEER. }
-
-Some delay occurring in extending the King’s beneficence to the Ordnance
-corps with respect to the increase of pay, the royal artillery at
-Woolwich, impatient to obtain it, exhibited unmistakable symptoms of
-discontent and insubordination. “More pay; less drill!” were their
-constant complaints, and hundreds stood by their arms ready to use them
-in compelling attention to their claims. One night particularly there
-was much disturbance, and next morning about daybreak, the Commandant of
-the garrison, Colonel Farringdon, of the royal artillery, ordered the
-whole of the military artificers to proceed to the artillery barracks
-and barricade the rear entrances. Captain Holloway, R.E., complied; and
-whilst the men were effecting the service as quietly as circumstances
-would admit, they were discovered by the mutineers, who showered upon
-them sundry articles of barrack furniture; and then bursting open the
-doors, fell upon the party and forced them from the barricades. Colonel
-Farringdon, who was witnessing the progress of the work, felt the shock
-of the sortie, and at once ordered the company of artificers to be
-withdrawn to preserve them from further danger. In the course of the
-morning the Duke of York made his appearance, and on promising to give
-the claims of the regiment immediate consideration, the disaffected were
-appeased and returned to duty.
-
-Already the subject of pay to the Ordnance corps had been under review,
-but the _émeute_ at Woolwich hastened the decision upon it. It was clear
-that the various allowances—permanent, incidental, and temporary—were
-insufficient to answer the objects for which they were intended; and
-also, that the application of them from sundry causes was both intricate
-and difficult. It was therefore recommended to discontinue all extra
-allowances, except a small sum, annually, for defraying the expense
-incurred in altering clothing; and issuing a rate of pay to all ranks
-adequate for every purpose, which measure His Majesty approved in a
-warrant dated 25th May. A comparison of the military allowances of the
-artificers prior to the promulgation of the new warrant, and the pay
-sanctioned on 25th May, is subjoined:—
-
- Pay per diem Extras Pay per diem
- before a-day.[105] by Warrant of
- 25th May, 25th May,
- 1797. 1797.
-
- s. d. d. s. d.
-
- Sergeant-major 2 3 1 2 9¼
-
- Sergeant 1 9 1½ 2 3¼
-
- Corporal 1 7 1½ 2 0¾
-
- Artificer 0 9 1¾ l 2½
-
- Drummer 0 9 1¾ 1 2½
-
- Labourer 0 6 2¼ 1 0½
-
------
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- The extras were allowed the men to provide them with bread, a pair of
- breeches once in two years, and a rosette; and to pay the expense of
- making up their gaiters, and converting their uniform coats, after a
- certain period, into jackets.
-
------
-
-In promulgating the augmentation of pay to the corps, Lord Cornwallis
-felt it his duty to accompany the pleasure of the King with an
-expression of his own sentiments; and accordingly, in the orders dated
-31st May, issued on the 2nd of June, he thus wrote:—
-
-“Marquis Cornwallis, Master-General of the Ordnance, feels himself happy
-in announcing to the corps of royal military artificers and labourers
-the increase which His Majesty has been graciously pleased to make to
-their pay, which puts it in their power to enjoy every comfort which a
-good soldier can reasonably desire.
-
-“The Master-General takes this opportunity of expressing his
-satisfaction at the regular behaviour and good conduct which this corps
-has manifested, and trusts it is not in the power of the most artful
-traitor to seduce the soldiers of the royal military artificers and
-labourers from their loyalty and attachment to their King and country;
-and when he assures them he shall always take the greatest pleasure in
-rendering them a service, he is persuaded they will continue to prove
-themselves deserving of his good offices.”
-
-Scarcely had the mutinies at Portsmouth subsided, before a more
-formidable one appeared in the fleet at the Nore. Equitable concessions
-had already been made to the navy; but at the Nore these were not
-received with satisfaction. Other exorbitant demands were made by the
-Nore seamen, and legitimate authority was resisted even by force of
-arms. This bold menace then led the Government to compel unconditional
-submission; and the instigators of the mutiny, with Richard Parker at
-their head, suffered the extreme penalty of the law. During this
-alarming outbreak, the company of artificers in the Medway division were
-very zealous in the completion of various works to be employed against
-the mutineers, should the crisis arise to require them. The companies at
-the different ports were also on the alert and distributed to several
-posts of importance. A detachment of sixteen non-commissioned officers
-and men—withdrawn from Gravesend in April—were returned to that station
-in June. This detachment erected two batteries at Northfleet for four
-and two guns of heavy calibre, to fire into the ‘Neptune,’ 98, and
-‘Lancaster,’ 64, lying off Greenhithe, should they attempt without
-proper orders to pass to the Nore. They also made such repairs as were
-necessary to the blockhouse and batteries at Gravesend, and also
-strengthened the fortifications and renewed the furnaces for heating
-shot red-hot at Tilbury Fort. Here also, before returning to Woolwich in
-August 1798, the detachment built a wooden river-wall at the
-Ferry-house.
-
-This year the cocked hat was revived. It was an adaptation of the
-pinched-up Nivernois hat and the ample Ramilies. The flaps were edged
-with broad black binding instead of gold lace as formerly. The cockade
-and gold loop were retained; but the short red feather was displaced by
-an eight-inch length white heckle. At each of the shoots or angles of
-the hat was a rose-shaped ornament of gold lace. The hats of the
-sergeants and sergeant-majors were of equal fineness and edged with
-black silk lace, flowered; while those of the corporals, artificers, and
-drummers were much superior to the labourers. The latter did not wear
-roses. Alterations were also made in the dress, inasmuch as the coatee,
-with its long skirts, was reduced to what was called a half-coat with
-short skirts. Lappels were abolished, and the laced looping was
-succeeded by frogging. The drummers wore scarlet for the first time,
-with the usual livery lace. Clubs were still in vogue; but the use of
-hair powder ceased. Sashes were now worn over the coatees of the ranks
-entitled to the distinction. See Plate VIII.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers. Plate VIII.
- UNIFORM, 1797 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 1798-1799.
-
-Contribution of corps to the State—Detachment with expedition to
- maritime Flanders—Destruction of the Bruges canal—Battle near
- Ostend—Draft to West Indies—Capture of Surinam—St. Domingo
- evacuated—Expedition to Minorca—Conduct of detachment while serving
- there—Composition of detachments for foreign service—Parties to
- Sevenoaks and Harwich—Mission to Turkey—Its movements and
- services—Special detachment to Gibraltar to construct a cistern for
- the Navy—Detachment with the expedition to Holland—Its services—Origin
- of the Royal Staff Corps.
-
-
-France, having but little occupation for her armies, turned her
-attention to England and matured arrangements on a scale of surpassing
-magnitude for its invasion. In this country all ranks and orders of men
-were affected by the threat; and such was the spirit of military ardour
-it induced, that corps of volunteers were rapidly embodied to meet the
-exigency of the times. Throughout the kingdom the wealthy contributed
-largely to assist the measures for defence; and the army, influenced by
-the popular feeling, joined in the demonstration and tendered
-subscriptions to the Government to aid in the realization of its
-purposes. The corps of military artificers also, prompted as well by a
-desire to relieve the general burden of the nation as from gratitude to
-the King for the recent addition to their pay, gave, in February, a
-contribution of three days' pay to the Treasury, to be applied as should
-be considered best for the defence of the state.[106] In acknowledging
-the letter conveying the gift, General Morse, the Colonel-Commandant,
-writes under date of 13th February, “their loyal and laudable offer has
-afforded me great satisfaction.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- The following is a copy of the letter of the Woolwich company,
- offering the contribution above alluded to:—
-
- _Woolwich, 12th February, 1798_.
-
- SIR,
-
- At a time when the exigencies of the State appear to require the
- assistance of every good subject to alleviate the general burden our
- fellow-subjects bear, it is the unanimous wish of the non-commissioned
- officers, artificers, and labourers of the corps of Royal Military
- Artificers, &c., at this place, to manifest the gratitude they owe
- their King and country for the late increase of pay, as well as their
- attachment to His Majesty’s person and government, and their zeal for
- the service in which the country is engaged, by offering a
- contribution of three days' pay, to be applied as may be thought best
- to the defence of the State.
-
- We request you will be pleased to lay this our wish before the Colonel
- Commandant of the corps for his approbation.
-
- Signed on behalf of the artificers and labourers, &c., of the corps of
- Royal Military Artificers, &c., at Woolwich, and with their unanimous
- consent.
-
- THOS. FORTUNE, Sergeant-major.[106a]
-
- JAMES DOUGLAS, }
- JOHN LEVICK, } Sergeants.
- EDWARD WATSON, }
-
- ROBT. HUTCHINSON, } Corporals.
- JOHN YOUNG, }
-
- BENJ. ROBERTS, }
- WILLIAM BAIN, } Lance-Corporals.
- HUGH KINNAIRD, }
-
- Captain CHARLES HOLLOWAY,
- Commanding the Royal Military
- Artificers, &c., at Woolwich.
-
-Footnote 106a:
-
- Enlisted as a matross in July, 1761, in the royal artillery, and was
- pensioned from that regiment in October, 1783. On May 1, 1795, he
- enlisted into the Royal Military Artificers, at the age of 52! and
- died at Canterbury, August 10, 1799. Was known as the author of a
- small work called “The Artillerist’s Companion,” published by Egerton
- in 1786.
-
-An expedition under Major-General Coote was fitted out in May, at
-Margate, for service against maritime Flanders. The design of the
-enterprise was to destroy the works and sluices of the Bruges canal near
-Ostend, and to cripple the internal navigation. To effect these services
-a detachment of the corps, experienced in mining, from the Chatham and
-Plymouth companies,[107] under Lieutenant Brownrigg, royal engineers,
-was attached to the force and sailed from Margate on the 14th May on
-board H.M.S. ‘Expedition,’ in which was General Coote himself.
-
------
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- The greater part of the detachment had been specially employed in
- mining services at Dover.
-
------
-
-The force disembarked in three divisions on the 19th May, and the
-artificers, who had been instructed on board ship by Lieutenant
-Brownrigg in the duties required of them, accompanied the first
-division, provided with intrenching tools, wooden petards, &c. On
-landing, the troops took possession of the forts that protected the
-sluices, in order that the intended work of destruction might be carried
-on successfully. The artificers, with a company from the 23rd regiment
-and a detachment of royal artillery, commenced the appointed work, and
-in about four hours laid the locks, gates, and sluices in ruins, burned
-several gun-boats, and effected an explosion in the basin of the canal
-that almost demolished it, and drained it dry. In this service the
-exertions and efficiency of the party may be inferred from the praises
-bestowed by General Coote upon Lieutenant Brownrigg.[108]
-
------
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- “Lieutenant Brownrigg, R.E., in about four hours, made all his
- arrangements, and completely destroyed the sluices; his mines having,
- in every particular, the desired effect, and the object of the
- expedition thereby attained. * * * In Lieutenant Brownrigg, I found
- infinite ability and resource: his zeal and attention were eminently
- conspicuous.”—London Gazette, 17 to 21 July, 1798.
-
------
-
-Having thus accomplished the object of the expedition the troops were
-ordered to re-embark. At the appointed hour the weather had become
-boisterous, and the violence of the surf rendered it impracticable to
-reach the shipping. A position was, therefore, taken up on the
-sand-hills before Ostend, which was strengthened in the night by the
-military artificers with intrenchments suitable to the occasion; but on
-the 20th, the British, hemmed in by a much stronger force, were
-compelled, after an obstinate contest, to surrender themselves prisoners
-of war. The casualties in the detachment were—killed, two; wounded,
-five; and thirteen, including the wounded, taken prisoners.[109] The
-survivors returned to England, and rejoined their companies in March,
-1799.
-
------
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 17 to 21 July, 1798.
-
------
-
-In the West Indies the Caribbean company was reduced at the end of the
-previous year by fever to thirty-three men, who were distributed in ones
-and twos through different districts of the conquered islands. None
-could be spared for active duty without detriment to other services
-equally important; and several expeditions were, therefore, undertaken
-without a military artificer accompanying them. In some measure to
-supply the numerous vacancies that had occurred, one corporal and
-twenty-nine privates embarked in February on board the ‘Union’ transport
-under Lieutenant T. R. I’Ans, R.E.; and on their arrival the company was
-increased to fifty-seven non-commissioned officers and men.
-
-On the 20th August, the expedition under Lieut.-General Trigge, which
-included three corporals and eleven men of Lieutenant-Colonel Shipley’s
-company, captured the Dutch settlement of Surinam, which surrendered
-without resistance. One artificer, John Nancarrow, mason, was
-accidentally drowned on this service; and this was the only casualty
-that occurred to the expedition.
-
-At St. Domingo the detachment fast wasted away on account of the arduous
-services of the island and the diseases of the climate; and on the
-evacuation of the place in September only two of the company, with
-Lieutenant H. Morshead, of the corps,[110] survived to embark with the
-troops. Of the original company, which numbered forty-seven on its
-arrival in May, 1796, thirty-six died, seven were invalided, two
-deserted, and the remaining two[111] were sent to do duty at Jamaica.
-
------
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- This officer was “ordered to the West Indies with two companies of the
- royal military artificers: himself and two of the privates only
- escaped the baleful effects of the climate of St. Domingo.”—United
- Service Journal, i., 1832, p. 142.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- These were privates Adam Cowan and John Westo. The former was at once
- appointed sergeant and conductor of stores to Commissary Meek of the
- Ordnance. After delivering over the stores of the department at
- Jamaica to a sergeant of Dutch emigrant artillery, he returned to
- England, and was discharged with a pension of 2_s._ 0½_d._ a-day in
- April, 1816.
-
------
-
-In November three sergeants, four corporals, fifty-five artificers,
-three labourers, and one drummer, total, sixty-six, formed from the
-party employed in Portugal, and from artificers of the companies at
-Gibraltar, were sent with the force under General Charles Stuart against
-Minorca. On landing, the Spaniards, without offering any resistance,
-retired into the town of Citadella, which possessed a sort of fortified
-_enceinte_. A battery for a few field-pieces was constructed against it
-in the night by the artificers under Captain D’Arcy, royal engineers,
-and after firing a few shots the place surrendered on the 15th November.
-Soon after the capitulation, the detachment was very much dispersed
-through the island, employed on various defensive works; and on Sir
-Charles Stuart quitting it, the military artificers remained to restore
-the fortifications. In January, 1801, the detachment was denominated the
-Minorca company; but in August, 1802, it was withdrawn, and being
-disbanded, the men were distributed among the companies of the corps at
-home and at Gibraltar.
-
-During their stay in Minorca it seems that their conduct was not above
-reproach, nor their services on the works as useful as desired. Sir
-Charles Pasley has recorded that they were found to be very inefficient,
-and ascribes it to their having been selected for the expedition from
-the Gibraltar companies, which, from circumstances, were for a number of
-years the worst in the corps.[112] Here, however, it is proper to add,
-that their inefficiency did not arise from their want of ability and
-skill as mechanics,[113] but from their general irregular behaviour
-occasioned chiefly by intemperance. Writing of the Gibraltar companies,
-Sir Augustus de Butts, in a letter dated 11th July, 1848, says:—“I
-cannot speak so confidently of their general conduct, but on the works,
-under the eye of their officers, they behaved well, and were very good
-artificers, particularly the non-commissioned officers.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification.’ Notes to Preface, p. iv., vol. i.
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- Several individual proofs could be adduced but two must suffice.
- Private Evan Roberts, a talented mason, was detached to Malta during
- the blockade of Valetta, and rendered good service as a foreman under
- Captain Gordon, R.E. On the formation of the Maltese artificers, he
- was appointed sergeant in one of the companies to prevent his removal
- to another station: and Sergeant-major James Shirres, formerly of the
- Gibraltar companies, from his correct conduct and merit as an
- artificer, was appointed overseer of works in the royal engineer
- department at Plymouth, in December, 1804.
-
------
-
-On the composition of detachments for foreign duty, Sir Charles Pasley
-has made some observations which may not inappropriately be introduced
-here. “When any expedition,” he writes, “was to be undertaken, the
-number of royal military artificers required were in all cases, selected
-by small detachments out of the stationary companies; and as the
-commanding engineers at the several fixed stations were naturally averse
-to parting with their best men, the detachments thus formed for field
-service, were generally composed of the stupidest and least trustworthy
-non-commissioned officers, and of the most ignorant, profligate, and
-abandoned of the privates.”[114] This was, it would appear, the general
-rule, but exceptions may fairly be taken in favour of the detachments
-forwarded to Toulon, St. Domingo, Halifax, and Ostend, as well as to
-some of the reinforcements sent to the Caribbee islands. These
-detachments were not formed of bad men weeded from the different
-companies, but of non-commissioned officers and privates whose
-qualifications and utility as mechanics were unquestionable, and whose
-conduct was approved.
-
------
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification.’ Notes to Preface, p. iv. vol. i.
-
------
-
-In April and May a corporal and party of carpenters of the Woolwich
-company were detached to Sevenoaks, and there built temporary wooden
-barracks for a company of artillery; a second party was employed in
-repairing Falmouth Castle from May to November; and in the latter month
-two carpenters and two masons, all privates, were sent to superintend
-workmen in the erection of fortifications and temporary defences at
-different places from Chelmsford to Harwich, in which duty they
-continued until April 1800.
-
-Napoleon, by a series of successes, had gained a firm footing in Egypt,
-and the subjugation of India was contemplated by the French Directory.
-As well to thwart the intention, as to stimulate the Turks, the British
-Government determined to send a military mission to the dominions of the
-Sultan, to cooperate with the Ottoman army in their hostile movements
-against the French. The mission being formed of artillery, engineers,
-and artificers, in all seventy-six persons, under Brigadier-General
-Koehler, of the royal artillery, embarked in the ‘New Adventure’
-transport in February, but did not sail from England till April. The
-military artificers, selected by Major Holloway, royal engineers, from
-the Woolwich company, numbered one sergeant—Edward Watson—two corporals,
-nineteen artificers, and two labourers; and as Major Holloway had
-proceeded overland to Constantinople,[115] were consequently placed
-under the orders of Captain Lacy, R.E. On the near approach of the
-‘Adventure’ to Gibraltar she was partially wrecked. A quantity of stores
-and some pontoons were thrown overboard, and private Philip Patterson,
-whilst exerting himself in casting away the stores, was washed off the
-deck by a wave into the sea and drowned. On the 14th June the transport
-arrived at Constantinople, and Major Holloway assumed the command of the
-artificers.
-
------
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- Brigadier-General Koehler, Major Holloway, and six other officers and
- gentlemen proceeded by the overland route to Constantinople. Three of
- the detachment accompanied them—privates Joseph Comfort, Jonathan
- Lewsey, and David Waddell. “Their journey in the outset,” says Dr.
- Wittman, in his ‘Travels in Turkey,’ &c., p. 6, “had been attended by
- uncommon severities, such, however, as might have been expected from a
- season more rigorous than any which had been experienced for many
- years. In passing over the continent, they had, at the entrance of the
- Elbe, been shipwrecked among the shoals of ice; and to relieve
- themselves from the perilous situation, had been under the necessity
- of passing over the ice to the extent of two miles, to gain the shore;
- by this effort they were providentially saved.” They now prosecuted
- their journey to Constantinople, where they arrived in March, 1799.
-
------
-
-On the removal of the mission to Levant Chiflick, five of the detachment
-were detained with the officers at Buyukdere, and the remainder were
-occupied in various services at the former place and Kaithana, where
-they erected a furnace for heating shot. Shortly afterwards experiments
-with red-hot shot were carried on in the presence of the Sultan, who, at
-the close of the practice, having reviewed the mission, presented each
-person with a gift suitable to his rank. Whilst building the furnace,
-the artificers, exposed to marsh miasma, were early attacked with fever.
-At first the cases were slight, but relapses following with malignity,
-three of the detachment died. To preserve the mission, therefore, it was
-removed in October to the Dardanelles. Previously to the embarkation,
-the artificers constructed a handsome model of the upper castle at
-Chennekalleh, on the Asiatic side of the Dardanelles, with Major
-Holloway’s improvements, which model was presented by that officer to
-Hadgi Ibrahim Effendi, Secretary at War for the Ottoman Porte.
-Subsequently, at the Dardanelles,[116] they were employed in effecting
-various alterations and additions to the castle until the 2nd December,
-when the mission was suddenly recalled to Constantinople; and landing on
-the 4th, awaited orders to proceed on more active service.[117]
-
------
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- While here, sergeant Watson of the artificers, in preparing money for
- the payment of the mission in the presence of a Turkish marine,
- quitted the room for a moment, leaving the money on the table. “On his
- return,” writes Dr. Wittman, “the marine had disappeared with 120
- piastres, about 9_l._ English. Having described the person of the
- delinquent to the Capitan Pacha, inquiries were at once commenced to
- detect the thief. On the second day after, the marine confessed his
- guilt to General Koehler, and begged his influence with the Capitan
- Pacha to save his life. The General did so, but several days elapsed
- before the affair was disposed of. During the interval, the General,
- anxious to prevent the culprit being strangled, expressed some doubts
- of the culprit’s identity; but in reply to this, the Pacha very
- handsomely declared his full conviction that the marine _had_ taken
- the money, as he was certain an Englishman would not tell an
- untruth.”—Wittman’s Travels in Turkey, Asia Minor, &c., p. 65.
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- The above particulars are chiefly taken from Dr. Wittman’s ‘Travels in
- Turkey,’ &c.
-
------
-
-At the instance of the Admiralty, a detachment of one sergeant, one
-corporal, and forty privates, chiefly masons and bricklayers,
-able-bodied men and good artificers, under Lieutenant C. Mann, royal
-engineers, sailed for Gibraltar in May on board the ‘Fortitude,’ and
-landed there the following month. The party was specially employed in
-constructing a cistern for naval purposes, under the military
-foremanship of sergeant Joseph Woodhead; and in October, 1800, it was
-incorporated with the Gibraltar companies.
-
-England and Russia having concluded a treaty to send an army to
-Holland to reinstate the Stadtholder, a corps of 12,000 men, under Sir
-Ralph Abercrombie, embarked for the Helder and landed on the 27th
-August. Attached to this expedition was a party of military
-artificers, consisting of one sergeant, two corporals, thirty-five
-artificers—seventeen of whom were carpenters—and one drummer,
-commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Hay, R.E. The detachment embarked on
-board the ‘Amphitrite,’ and disembarking with the second division,
-were present in the action of that day.
-
-After forming the engineer park near the Helder, about ten men were left
-to repair the fort; and the remainder, divided into brigades of four to
-each brigade, followed the troops in their forward movement in charge of
-the intrenching equipment of the expedition, which was conveyed in
-waggons. Early in September, the detachment constructed several
-batteries for guns and mortars to defend the post at Zuyp; as also,
-subsequently, at Hoorn and Egmont-op-Zee; and to facilitate the march of
-the army to the latter place, they assisted in the formation of three
-flying bridges over canals that intersected the route. In the retreat,
-they were continually employed in throwing small bridges across the
-canals by means of planking, felled trees, and other chance materials.
-At Alkmaer they constructed several defensive works; and on retiring
-from thence, where three roads met, they raised, in an incredibly short
-time, a mound of earth about twelve feet high, across the junction, with
-the view of impeding the enemy in their pursuit of the British. None of
-the military artificers were killed or wounded on this service. On the
-evacuation of Holland in November the detachment rejoined the companies.
-
-Here, perhaps, it would be proper to allude, in a general remark, to the
-practice of providing detachments for foreign service. It will already
-have been observed, that whenever any expedition was undertaken, resort
-was invariably had to the royal military artificers for a selection of
-men to accompany it, suitable to the work upon which it was contemplated
-they would be employed; but the numbers furnished were always
-insufficient for the purpose, and no representations or remonstrances
-could avail in altering a custom, which, from causes not easily
-surmised, seems to have been pertinaciously persevered in.
-
-This remark is fully borne out by the statement of a highly
-distinguished officer;[118] and is moreover corroborated by the fact,
-that about this time, the particular attention of the Commander-in-Chief
-was drawn to the subject, without, however, accomplishing what the
-interests of the service greatly needed. It is said, that when the Duke
-of York was preparing his expedition for Holland, he demanded efficient
-assistance from the royal engineers and royal military artificers,
-which, for some reason, the Ordnance authorities reluctantly met with an
-inadequate provision. Annoyed by the limited number tendered, his Royal
-Highness determined to establish a corps competent to discharge the
-duties usually devolving upon the royal engineers, “which should be
-absolutely at the disposal of the Horse Guards; and as his Royal
-Highness held office in times when the thoughts of statesmen were bent
-rather to render the means of the country’s defence complete, and to aid
-other nations in opposing the aggressions of an arrogant and
-unscrupulous power, than to effect savings in the public expenditure, he
-found no difficulty in consummating his wishes, and hence arose the
-royal staff corps.”[119]
-
------
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- Sir John Jones, in his ‘Sieges,’ vol. ii., note 38, p. 389, 2nd edit.
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Gleig’s ‘Military History,’ xxxvii., p. 287.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1800.
-
-Mortality in the West Indies—Blockade of Malta—Capture of a transport on
- passage from Nova Scotia—Movements and services of detachments in
- Turkey; attacked with fever—Anecdote of private Thomas Taylor at
- Constantinople—Cruise of expedition to Cadiz—Attack on the city
- abandoned—Subsequent movements of the expedition; Malta; and
- re-embarkation for Egypt—Statistics of companies at Gibraltar.
-
-
-From the diminished state of the company in the West Indies, and the
-impracticability of filling up the constantly-recurring vacancies by
-drafts from England, authority was given to the Commanding Engineer in
-the Leeward Islands, to obtain on the spot, men for the company properly
-qualified and climatized, either by enlistment or transfer from other
-corps. This led to an immediate incorporation, in April, of one
-sergeant, twenty privates, and two drummers, from the 43rd and other
-regiments; and though the plan was attended with considerable success,
-the still greater mortality from fever always kept the company greatly
-below its establishment.
-
-In addition to the repeated allusion made to the military artificers in
-the West Indies, the following statistics of mortality, as far as the
-same can now be ascertained, affording a tolerably correct idea of the
-unhealthiness of the climate, and the sufferings to which the men must
-have been subjected, may here not be misplaced.
-
- Number of Deaths.
- 1793 17
- 1794 65
- 1795 19
- 1796 70
- 1797 37
- 1798 12
- 1799 10
- 1800 9
- —
- Total 239
-
-The aggregate number of artificers and labourers sent there from year to
-year, including those transferred from other corps and enlisted on the
-spot, amounted to about 350. More than two-thirds of the number,
-therefore, fell victims to the war and the climate! Many also were sent
-home invalided, several of whom died on the passage, or soon after
-landing in England. At the close of 1800, the strength of the company
-did not exceed seventy-eight of all ranks, twenty-two being required to
-complete it.
-
-In February, private Evan Roberts, an active and intelligent artificer,
-was chosen from the Minorca company for service at the blockade of La
-Valetta, and arrived at Malta before the end of the month. From that
-time until the surrender of the fortress on the 15th of September, he
-served in the department with zeal and efficiency under Captain Gordon,
-royal engineers; and continued, though a private, to discharge the
-duties of an overseer of works until the formation, in 1806, of the
-first company of Maltese artificers, to which he was transferred as
-sergeant.
-
-At Halifax, Nova Scotia, three invalids embarked on board the ‘Diamond’
-transport on the 15th of September, with several invalids of Captain R.
-Wright’s company of royal artillery, and sailed with the fleet on the
-19th of that month. Previously to weighing anchor, private Walter Allan
-was accidentally drowned in the harbour by falling overboard; and the
-other two, privates Ninian Kerr and Samuel Milman, were captured by the
-French some time in October. But all efforts to ascertain where, or how,
-the enemy effected the seizure of the vessel with her crew and
-passengers, have proved unsuccessful.
-
-Soon after the removal of the mission from the Dardanelles to
-Constantinople, Captain Lacy and Lieutenant Fletcher, R.E., were
-detached to join the Turkish army in Syria. With these officers two
-military artificers were also sent, one of whom returned from Cyprus
-with the former officer in April, and the other reached the mission
-again, some two months later, with Captain Lacy. On the 13th of June,
-the artificers sailed from Constantinople[120] with the mission, and
-landed at Jaffa on the 2nd of July, where they encamped with the Turkish
-army and commenced, under the foremanship of sergeant E. Watson, the
-improvements suggested by Major Holloway in the fortifications of that
-port. These, however, though far advanced, were ultimately set aside,
-and the artificers were appointed to erect several new works in front of
-Jaffa; which, in consequence of the French being in great force at
-Catieh, were considered to be more essential than the proposed
-alterations to the defences of the town. With great ceremony, on the
-30th of August, the first stone of the intended new bastion was laid by
-the Grand Vizier; and shortly after, his Highness having reviewed the
-mission, marked his approbation of their appearance by a present to each
-non-commissioned officer and soldier. In December the fever, which had
-been alarmingly rife in the Turkish camp, attacked the mission. Its
-first victim was a military artificer; and before the end of the month,
-though the cases of mortality were few, the mission had to lament the
-loss by death, of their commander, General Koehler, R.A., and his lady.
-Major Holloway, royal engineers, then assumed the command, and at the
-close of the year, a change of cantonment having re-established the
-health of the men, the works at the new bastion progressed
-vigorously.[121]
-
------
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- Some time before leaving the city, private Thomas Taylor, royal
- military artificers, was, without any provocation, assaulted by a
- Turk, who attempted to stab him with his yatikan. On a report of this
- outrage being made to the Capitan Pacha, to whose retinue the Turk
- belonged, he came to a resolution to have him decapitated. By the
- mediation and entreaties of Lord Elgin, a mitigation of the punishment
- ensued, and the Turk, after receiving fifty strokes of the bastinado
- on the soles of his feet, was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment
- in the college of Pera, _to learn the Arabic language_.—Dr. Wittman’s
- Turkey, p. 93.
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- Particulars for the most part obtained from Wittman’s ‘Travels in
- Turkey,’ &c.
-
------
-
-In April, a detachment of one sergeant, two corporals, and thirty
-artificers, under Captain Bryce, R.E., accompanied the expedition under
-Sir Ralph Abercrombie, for employment on secret service. The men were
-selected from the different home companies, and all were “sufficiently
-qualified in their respective trades, as well as able-bodied.”
-Proceeding to Portsmouth, they remained inactive for about six weeks;
-and, at length embarking on board the ‘Asia’ transport, sailed in June
-with the expedition. In the Channel off Portland, the fleet encountered
-a gale, and was driven back to Portsmouth; but on a fair wind springing
-up, got under weigh again, and in due time ran up the Tagus. From thence
-the ‘Asia’ proceeded to Gibraltar, lay there about a month, and sailing
-for Minorca, soon reached that island and landed the artificers; where,
-for about seven weeks, they were employed in the construction of
-temporary barracks, &c., for the troops put on shore. At the expiration
-of this period, the artificers returned to the ‘Asia’ and retracing the
-route to Gibraltar, anchored for a fortnight. There they were reinforced
-by one sergeant, one corporal, and five miners of the companies at the
-fortress; and at the appointed hour, the ‘Asia,’ again weighing anchor
-for Tetuan Bay, took water there and sailed with the fleet for Cadiz.
-
-When off Cadiz, the artificers were told off into two brigades, and six
-of the boldest and most expert men were selected to land with the first
-division, and the remainder with the second. On the morning of the day
-in which the attempt was to be made, the artificers, as a preliminary
-measure, removed all the intrenching tools and engineers' stores into
-the launches, and then took their places in the boats, provided with
-adzes, pole-axes, and miners' tools for removing impediments, &c. A long
-interval of breathless suspense followed, in which the seamen rested
-impatiently on their oars; but, as an epidemic raged at the time in the
-city, the landing was countermanded, and the men and stores being
-reshipped, the meditated attack upon Cadiz was relinquished. The ‘Asia,’
-consequently, sailed for Tetuan Bay, where, exposed to a storm, she was
-compelled to cut her cable and run for Cape Spartel. There she anchored
-for four days, and on the wind shifting again made for the bay.[122]
-
------
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- The seven non-commissioned officers and men embarked at Gibraltar to
- join the expedition, returned to their companies at the fortress
- immediately after the failure at Cadiz.
-
------
-
-At this rendezvous the fleet was divided into three divisions, and the
-artificers accompanied that under Sir Ralph Abercrombie to Malta. There
-they were landed; and after a stay of about seven weeks, during which
-they were employed preparing platforms and fascines, re-embarked on the
-17th of December, seven on board the ‘Ajax,’ 74, Captain the Hon. Sir
-Alexander Cochrane, and the remainder on board the ‘Asia’ transport.
-Hitherto the service of the expedition had been expended in a series of
-cruises or reconnaissances alike harassing and wearying, but at length,
-a glimpse of approaching activity burst upon the armament. Soon the
-enterprise commenced, and terminated with glory to Britain by rescuing
-an inoffensive nation from the eagle grasp of an oppressive republic.
-
-Ever since the incorporation of the Gibraltar companies with the corps,
-the power to recruit for those companies was vested in the commanding
-royal engineer at the fortress, and, so far, was exercised with
-tolerable success. This permission was the more necessary, as, from the
-frequent calls made upon the home companies to detach parties for the
-service of particular expeditions, it was impossible, so to attend to
-those companies as to keep them numerically complete. The effect of that
-power was, that from the date of the incorporation to the end of 1800,
-ninety-six artificers had either been enlisted or received as transfers
-from regiments in the garrison; but from the unavoidable exposure of the
-men to the sun in carrying on their working duties, and the general
-unhealthiness of the climate, the casualties in the companies far
-exceeded the number that joined. Of the increase and decrease in the
-companies for the above period, the following is an accurate
-exposition:—
-
- Strength at the incorporation, of all ranks 255
- Joined from employment at the naval reservoir 36
- Enlisted or transferred from regiments in garrison @b96
- ——
- Total 387
-
-The decrease was:—
-
- Deaths 45
- Discharges 31
- Invalided 38
- Desertions 4
- -- 118
- ——
- 269
- Wanted to complete 6
- ——
- Establishment 275
- ===
-
-
-
-
- 1801-1802.
-
-Distribution of corps—Dispersion of West India
- company—Statistics—Detachment to St. Marcou—Capture of Danish
- settlements—Casualties in West India company—Compared with mortality
- in Gibraltar companies—Working dress—Services, &c., of detachment at
- Gibraltar—Conduct of Sergeant W. Shirres—Concession to the companies
- by the Duke of Kent—Cocked hat superseded by the chaco.
-
-
-On the 1st January the corps was distributed in companies and
-detachments as follows. The names of the officers in command and the
-senior non-commissioned officers at the several stations are also
-added:—
-
- Sergeant-majors.
- Woolwich Lieut.-Col. B. Fisher John Eaves.
- Chatham Lieut.-Col. Thos. Nepean John Palmer.
- Portsmouth } Col. John Evelegh { James Smith.
- Gosport } { Alexander Spence.
- Plymouth Maj.-Gen. Alex. Mercer William Browne.
- Jersey Capt. John Humfrey Anthony Haig.
- Guernsey Lieut.-Col. J. Mackelcan Andrew Gray.
- Dover
- Gibraltar Lieut.-Col. Wm. Fyers Joseph Makin.
- Minorca Capt. Robert D’Arcy { Sergeant Jas. Shirres,
- { _Foreman of
- Carpenters_.
- Nova Scotia Capt. Wm. Fenwick { Sergeant John Catto,
- { _Foreman of Masons_.
- West Indies Col. Chas. Shipley Serg.-Maj. Matthew Hoey.
- Egyptian Capt. Alex. Bryce { Sergeant John McArthur,
- Expedition
- { _Master Smith_.
- Jaffa, with the } Major C. Holloway { Sergeant Edward Watson,
- Ottoman army } { _Master Carpenter_.
-
-The head-quarters of the West India company were at Martinique, from
-which non-commissioned officers and men were detached to St. Lucia, St.
-Vincent’s, St. Kitt’s, St. Pierre’s, the Saintes, Surinam, and
-Barbadoes, for the purpose of acting as overseers on the works or for
-employment on particular services.
-
-The establishment of the corps was 975; but wanting 232 to complete, its
-strength only amounted to 743 of all ranks. Of this number 403 were
-abroad and 340 at home.
-
-Early in the year a small party of one sergeant, and seven artificers
-from the Portsmouth and Gosport companies were sent to St. Marcou, an
-island on the coast of France, seven miles east of Cape la Hogue, to
-repair the fortifications; and having accomplished the service returned
-to their companies in November.
-
-To the expedition which proceeded against the Danish settlements in
-March, under the command of Lieut.-General Trigge, were attached one
-sergeant-major, two corporals, and twenty privates of the military
-artificers, who were present at the capture of the islands of St.
-Bartholomew, St. Martin, St. Thomas, St. John, and Santa Croix.
-
-The loss in the West India company by fever and other diseases during
-the year amounted to twenty, whose vacancies were immediately filled up
-by transfers from the line.
-
-In May the working dress consisted of a blue cloth jacket with skirts,
-two serge waistcoats with sleeves, two pairs of blue serge pantaloons, a
-black round hat, and a pair of half black gaiters. One of the waistcoats
-and a pair of pantaloons formed the second working dress. The new jacket
-was made of stouter and better cloth than formerly; sleeves were added
-to the serge waistcoats, and the second pair of pantaloons were
-substituted for the canvas ones. These improvements were considered
-equivalent to a linen shirt, a pair of stockings, and a canvas jacket
-previously supplied with the working suit, but which, from this year,
-ceased to be issued to the corps.
-
-At the opening of the year the military artificers with the British
-mission to Turkey, reduced to fifteen men, were occupied in the erection
-of the new bastion at Jaffa, which was finished and the guns placed on
-the platforms with great pomp on the 27th January. Of the detachment
-with the mission, two were styled labourers, from their not having been
-promoted to the rank of artificers; and they, when not immediately
-occupied on the works, acted in the capacity of servants to Major
-Holloway. One of these labourers when out one afternoon some distance
-from Jaffa, exercising the Major’s horses, was attacked by a party of
-Arabs on a predatory excursion, by whose fire the Major’s horse was
-killed, and the bâtman wounded with balls and slugs in nine different
-places. The servant of Major Hope, R. A. was also in the assault; and by
-great exertion succeeded in bearing his comrade back to the camp. Dr.
-Wittman, of the mission, with celerity equal to his skill, extracted the
-missiles and the sufferer speedily recovered.[123]
-
------
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- Either private Jonathan Lewsey or private David Waddell, both of whom
- acted as servants to Major Holloway, R.E. The former was a powerful
- man, and remarkable from the circumstance of his having _four thumbs_!
- two on each hand in addition to the proper complement of fingers. On
- the breaking up of the mission at Grand Cairo, these privates returned
- to England with that officer by the overland route.
-
------
-
-On the 2nd February, Captain Lacy, royal engineers, was despatched to El
-Arish to collect military information, accompanied by a private of the
-artificers who early fell a sacrifice to the plague that prevailed
-there. On the 25th of that month, the Ottoman army commenced its march
-to Grand Cairo, the British mission being attached to the body guard of
-his Highness the Vizier, mounted on fine horses superbly caparisoned,
-and attended by Arabs. Passing through Ashdod, the army encamped for a
-while at Gaza, where the military artificers were separated into three
-parties, and attached to the divisions respectively commanded by the
-Grand Vizier, Mahomed Pacha, and Taher Pacha; but it is difficult to
-record with satisfactory distinctness, the particular services in which
-they subsequently participated. On the 28th March the army entered the
-Desert at Kahnyounes, and traversing that arid and inhospitable region
-for about 150 miles, subjected to occasional deprivation of food and
-water, and exposed to sultry heats, infectious diseases, and danger,
-reached Salahieh on the 27th April, after a tedious and harassing march
-of thirty-two days. Two of the military artificers died in the Desert;
-and the survivors, who were present at the capture of Salahieh and
-Belbeis, and in the action near the village of Elhanka, entered Cairo on
-the 11th July. There they were employed during the remainder of the
-year, in renewing the bridge of boats across the Nile constructed by the
-French to preserve a communication with Gizeh, and also in repairing the
-fortifications of the city, until the 19th February, 1802, when they
-quitted for Rosetta. From this town they were removed to Alexandria, and
-afterwards to Malta, where, finally embarking for England, they arrived
-at different periods in the fall of 1802 and spring of 1803.[124] The
-strength of the detachment on joining the Turkish mission, was
-twenty-four of all ranks; eleven only returned! Of the casualties eleven
-died of fever or the plague, and two were drowned accidentally. “After a
-series of painful, harassing, and critical events,” says the journalist,
-“the labours of the mission closed; and the patience, forbearance, and
-circumspection of the individuals engaged in this long and perilous
-service, were manifested on a variety of trying occasions, which
-required all the energy inherent in the British military
-character.”[125]
-
------
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- Sergeant Edward Watson, who enlisted into the artillery as a matross,
- January 28, 1775, and joined the corps at Woolwich, March 1, 1792, was
- the senior non-commissioned officer with the mission; and in
- consideration of his zeal, ability, and uniform exemplary conduct, as
- well in discharge of his military duties, as in the executive
- superintendence of the several works undertaken by Major Holloway, he
- was promoted, on his arrival in England, to be sergeant-major of the
- Woolwich company. On December 1, 1810, he was discharged. For similar
- reasons corporal David Pollock was advanced to the rank of sergeant,
- and appointed master-smith.
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- Wittman’s ‘Turkey,’ p. 395.
-
------
-
-Meanwhile the detachment of the corps with the force under the command
-of Sir Ralph Abercrombie reached Marmorice Bay; and with the exception
-of the party on board the ‘Ajax’, landed, and prepared a shipload of
-fascines and gabions to be used in the intended enterprise. Five of the
-‘Ajax’ men were employed in different repairs to the vessel; and the
-other two, assisted by a corporal of the 44th regiment, made an elegant
-double couch of mahogany covered with various beautifully-marked skins
-from Rhodes, for the Turkish General Mustapha, which was presented to
-him by Captain the Hon. Alexander Cochrane, R.N. On the 17th February,
-the fleet set sail for Egypt, and running into Aboukir Bay on the 1st
-March, the troops landed on the 7th, and then followed a display of
-invincible ardour and bravery on the part of the British, that checked
-France in her career of success, and turned all her glorious Egyptian
-conquests into painful disasters and capitulations.
-
-With the first division were landed the seven military artificers of the
-‘Ajax,’ who were present in the action of that morning; and eight hours
-afterwards commenced to trace the necessary works for besieging Aboukir
-Castle. Next day the remainder of the detachment landed from the ‘Asia’
-transport, and dispersed in small parties of about four each to the
-several brigades of the army, advanced to Alexandria. Under the
-direction of their officers, the ‘Ajax’ artificers superintended the
-construction of batteries for eleven guns and three mortars in front of
-Aboukir, laying all the platforms themselves, and restoring, when
-damaged by the enemy’s fire, the cheeks of the embrasures which were
-formed by a double row of sand-bags backed or strengthened by a row of
-casks filled with earth, a plan suggested by Major M‘Kerras, royal
-engineers, previously to his being killed; but which was not again
-resorted to, during the subsequent operations of the campaign. On the
-19th March the castle surrendered.
-
-On the heights of Alexandria, the artificers with the column under Sir
-Ralph Abercrombie, superintended the erection of batteries and redoubts
-of sand-bags, fascines, and gabions, which formed a strong line of
-defence from the sea to Lake Maedie. The Aboukir party joining on the
-20th, also assisted in the works until their completion. Unable, from
-being unarmed, to take an active part in the battle of Alexandria on the
-21st March, they occupied themselves in the essential duty of carrying
-shot, shell, and ammunition to the artillery and the troops.
-
-After the battle the military artificers had the charge, under their
-officers, of renewing the works on the heights, and when completed were
-appointed to aid in effecting the inundation of a portion of the
-country. This was accomplished by cutting seven channels in the dyke of
-the canal of Alexandria, through which the waters of Lake Aboukir rushed
-into Lake Mareotis, then nearly dry, and about ten feet below the level
-of Lake Aboukir. Across the Nile they subsequently threw a bridge of
-boats, to facilitate the communication between Alexandria and Rosetta,
-re-forming it when swept away by the rapidity of the current; and
-afterwards they assisted in the construction of a similar bridge across
-the openings in the dyke of the canal of Alexandria for the convenience
-of the shipping.
-
-Four of the artificers who were at the siege of the castle of Aboukir
-were attached to the brigade under Colonel Spencer, and served at the
-reduction of Rosetta, Fort St. Julian—against which they constructed
-batteries for two guns and two mortars—Elhamet, Alkam, and Rahmanieh.
-
-Shortly after they proceeded to Grand Cairo and were present at its
-surrender on the 27th June. A brief interval elapsed, when they returned
-to Alexandria, by the river Nile, in the large which contained the field
-equipment of the detachment. On reaching Alexandria, the entire
-detachment was divided into two parties, one under Captain Bryce, the
-chief engineer, and the other under Captain Ford, royal engineers; and
-were subsequently present at the siege of the castle of Marabout, the
-taking of Redoubt de Bain, and at the final fall of Alexandria on the
-27th August. No casualties in killed and wounded are reported to have
-taken place among the men during the campaign; and though no particular
-testimony to their merits appears to have been recorded, from the
-circumstance of their being so few in number, and from the absence of
-prominent occasions of exhibiting their zeal and efficiency, arising
-from the enemy capitulating and surrendering many of his works without
-resistance, still they were permitted in common with the other troops
-that served in Egypt, to wear the device of the Sphinx on their
-appointments. A like honour was also conferred upon the military
-artificers who served with the mission to Turkey.
-
-Immediately following the capture of Alexandria, an expedition was sent
-to Elba, under Admiral Lord Keith and General Sir Eyre Coote. Five
-military artificers were attached to it on board the ‘Amphitrite’
-transport, under the orders of Captain Birch, royal engineers; but, when
-between Rhodes and Candia, an English man-of-war brought intelligence of
-peace to Lord Keith, and the descent upon the island was relinquished.
-Thereupon the ‘Amphitrite’ sailed for Malta, where the artificers
-remained for six weeks, employed in repairing the fortifications. During
-this period, they were joined by others of the detachment from
-Alexandria, and re-embarking, arrived in England in February, 1802. The
-residue of the detachment, detained for a while at Alexandria and Malta
-watching the development of events, reached these shores in August,
-1803.
-
-On the Duke of Kent being appointed Governor of Gibraltar, his first
-care was to introduce some wholesome regulations for diminishing the
-drunkenness and crime so prevalent in the garrison. Stringent measures
-were therefore adopted with regard to the sale of liquors and wines in
-the canteens, scrupulous attention was paid to the appearance of the men
-in the streets, and drill and discipline were rigorously enforced. These
-reforms, however, were received with much discontent; and on
-Christmas-eve of 1802 the stifled feeling of insubordination broke out
-into mutiny.
-
-In this _émeute_ the greater part of the military artificers took an
-unequivocal but unimportant part. The Duke’s new rules interfered more
-essentially with the practices and indulgences of the companies, than
-with any other troops in the garrison. Besides being subjected to the
-general rigours imposed on the troops, the artificers were deprived of
-the privilege of working privately in the town, and were once a week
-taken from the command of their own officers, and drilled and
-disciplined by the Town Major. These innovations upon old usages
-produced considerable disaffection in the companies, and many of the
-more reckless and turbulent were not backward in ranging themselves on
-the side of the mutineers. Joining a party of the Royals at night, at
-the Town Range Barracks, they proceeded in company to the South
-Barracks, where, on approaching to make arrangements for a simultaneous
-rising, the 18th Royal Irish fired upon them, with no better result than
-tearing the feather from the hat of one of the privates of the
-artificers.
-
-This harmless volley had the effect of cooling the ardour of the
-mutineers, and the rebel artificers becoming tranquil, returned home;
-but on the Saturday following, another and more decided exhibition being
-expected, the officers of engineers met at the barracks, to endeavour to
-prevent any co-operation with the mutineers. Meanwhile the companies
-received their working pay, and all restrictions being taken off the
-canteen, the intemperance that followed soon rendered the men too
-insensible to discharge any duty effectually, either for the Crown or
-the mutineers. During the night a strong party of the 25th regiment
-appeared at the gates to demand the services of the companies; but
-sergeant William Shirres, assisted by a small guard of the corps, closed
-and daringly held the gates against the exasperated rebels, and
-prevented any communication with the barracks. Without entering further
-into the progress of the mutiny, it will be sufficient to add, that it
-was soon suppressed, and three of the ringleaders of the 25th regiment
-were shot on the Grand Parade by sentence of a general court-martial.
-
-A few days after the Duke of Kent ordered the companies to be specially
-paraded for his inspection. Having passed down the ranks and moved to
-the front, his Royal Highness addressed them. He appeared to have been
-informed that the artificers had joined with the Royals and 25th
-regiment in their intemperate display; but added, that he felt every
-reluctance to give credence to the report, and also made some
-complimentary allusions to the services of the companies at the
-fortress. He then desired to know if there were any complaints, in
-order, if reasonable, to adjust them. The men, thus courteously invited,
-having stated their wish to be drilled by their own officers, his Royal
-Highness directed the Town Major to manœuvre the companies. Carefully
-the Duke watched the firelock exercise and the execution of the various
-evolutions, and, expressing his satisfaction with their appearance and
-drill, granted their request.
-
-This year the cocked hat, worn since 1797, was superseded by the chaco,
-similar in size and shape to the one commonly adopted in the army. So
-strange an alteration—from the sage-like cocked hat to its trim
-substitute—obtained for the new head-gear the cimmerian appellation of
-the “smoke-jack.” The white heckle feather worn with the cocked hat, was
-retained. See Plate IX. As time wound up, this description of chaco lost
-its upright lines for one which, approaching a cone in shape, was called
-the “sugar-loaf cap.” The latter, again, was superseded by another in
-1813, which, from its peculiar form, was familiarly styled the
-“bang-up.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Military Artificers Plate IX.
- UNIFORM 1802 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 1803-1805.
-
-Party to Ceylon—The treaty of Amiens broken—State of West India
- company—Capture of St. Lucia—Tobago—Demerara, Essequibo, and
- Berbice—Works at Spike Island—Capture of Surinam—Conduct of private
- George Mitchell—Batavian soldiers join West India Company—Fever at
- Gibraltar—Consequent mortality.—Humane and intrepid conduct of three
- privates—Invasion of England—Works at Dover—Jersey—Chelmsford—Martello
- towers at Eastbourne—Bomb tenders at Woolwich—Recruiting—Volunteers
- from the Line and Militia—Treaty of St. Petersburgh—Party to
- Naples—Ditto to Hanover.
-
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel Bridges having been appointed commanding royal
-engineer in Ceylon, he applied for a detachment of the military
-artificers to accompany him to that station. The requisite sanction
-being procured, six artificers, comprising one corporal, two carpenters,
-one mason, one bricklayer, and one smith, embarked for the East in
-January. The precise object of despatching so small a party to so
-distant a settlement cannot now be learned, but every care was taken to
-choose men for the service whose activity and abilities as craftsmen
-were well known, and whose conduct was unexceptionable. “Select,” says
-the order to the officer called upon to furnish the party, “such men as
-you would prefer if going on the service yourself.” In June the party
-arrived at Trincomalee, but what specific services were performed by
-them in the colony it would be idle to conjecture. Before the autumn of
-1806, four of the men died, but the other two held up against the
-climate till 1815, when one left for England and was discharged,[126]
-and the other died in April, 1817.
-
------
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- John Wallace. It is related of him that he was lost sight of for many
- months, and his appearance at Woolwich gave rise to as much surprise
- as his person to doubt. All traces of the original man had worn away,
- and from the oddness of his dress, and peculiarity of his manners, the
- task of recognition was rendered still more perplexing. Eventually,
- satisfactory proofs of his identity being obtained, he was again
- acknowledged and discharged on a pension of 1_s._ 6_d._ a-day, his
- service in the corps having exceeded thirty-three years.
-
------
-
-The treaty of peace between France and Great Britain was signed on the
-27th March, 1802, and hailed everywhere with exultation. Soon, however,
-Buonaparte began to exhibit a spirit at variance with the solemn
-engagement, and his irrepressible ambition forced him to seek occasions
-for gratifying it. Increased power and dominion were the engrossing
-objects of his genius; and, singular as it may appear, states and
-republics fell under his sway without his lifting a sword to conquer
-them. All this transpired while yet the burst of joy at the peaceful
-negotiation was ringing in the courts of Europe; but Great Britain,
-though a sullen spectator of these events, caring more to be blamed for
-reluctance than impetuosity, at length interfered, and the result was,
-that war was declared with the French republic on the 18th May, 1803.
-
-At that period the company stationed in the West Indies had nearly
-reached its establishment; and, as the sickness, so rife in former
-years, had greatly lessened both in malignity and extent, the general
-health of the men had much improved. So keen was Lieutenant-Colonel
-Shipley about maintaining his company complete, that whenever a death
-occurred or an artificer quitted the station through ill health, he
-invariably applied direct to the general officer in command of the
-troops, to order a tradesman of approved qualification and conduct to be
-transferred to it from the line. Alike interested in the efficiency of
-the company, the general officer always acceded to his request; and the
-company, consequently, was in excellent condition for affording
-effective co-operation in any active service.
-
-Intelligence of the renewal of hostilities soon reached the West India
-islands, and an expedition was forthwith prepared to be employed in the
-capture of St. Lucia, under the command of General Grinfield and
-Commodore Hood. To this force were attached one sergeant-major, three
-sergeants, five corporals, and sixty-eight privates of the military
-artificers, who were engaged, on the 22nd June, in the storming of Morne
-Fortuné and taking of St. Lucia. Corporal William Dyson was killed at
-the storm,[127] but of the wounded, no particulars exist. Of the
-services of Colonel Shipley and his company in this capture, the
-General, under date of June 22nd, thus wrote:—“To Lieutenant-Colonel
-Shipley and the royal engineers, he is indebted in a high degree for
-assistance and professional advice.”[128]
-
------
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- In the ‘London Gazette,’ 26 to 30 July, 1803, this corporal is, by
- mistake, returned as sergeant.
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- ‘London Gazette Extraordinary,’ August 15, 1803.
-
------
-
-In July the same company was present at the capitulation of Tobago,
-which surrendered without bloodshed to the forces under General
-Grinfield. “Great praise,” says the General in his orders of the 1st
-July, “is also due to the alertness and readiness of the royal artillery
-and royal artificers in their embarkation and disembarkation, both of
-themselves, ordnance, and stores, and for their attention to their
-discipline and duties” [129]
-
------
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- Ibid.
-
------
-
-In the following September, Colonel Shipley and one sergeant-major,
-three sergeants, one corporal, and thirty-three privates, were attached
-to another expedition under the same General, and were present at the
-capture of the colonies of Demerara, Essequibo, and Berbice. Like
-Tobago, these islands surrendered without resistance. At each of the
-subjugated settlements and at Trinidad, a small party was left to carry
-on the current services and improve the defences. The head-quarters
-still remained at Martinique. During the year the deaths in the company
-did not exceed twelve men; and its strength at the end of the year was
-eighty-seven of all ranks, of whom only eight were ineffective from
-sickness.
-
-Early in the year Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Charles Holloway was appointed
-commanding royal engineer at Cork, and at once commenced a minute
-examination of the fortifications under his charge. These were found to
-be defective, inasmuch as they did not sufficiently command the
-surrounding country and harbour. Sir Charles, therefore, among many
-works which he suggested for the defence of the district, projected an
-extensive fort for Spike Island to be erected on the site of
-Westmoreland Fort, which was to be demolished. Authorized to carry his
-plans into execution, he applied and obtained in October, the services
-of an efficient detachment of tradesmen, consisting of a sergeant, and
-master mason, thirteen artificers, and one labourer of the Woolwich
-company, to aid in destroying the old fort and in erecting the proposed
-new one. As the works progressed and their completion was pressed, the
-detachment, in December, 1804, was augmented to thirty-eight
-non-commissioned officers and artificers; and in January, 1805, to a
-full company of one hundred strong, under the denomination of the “Spike
-Island Company.” Between five and six thousand civil mechanics and
-labourers were daily employed at the fort, over whom, to a certain
-extent, were placed the non-commissioned officers of the company, as
-masters of the respective trades, or foremen of particular portions of
-the work.
-
-Arrangements for an expedition against Surinam having been perfected,
-Major-General Sir Charles Green and Commodore Hood sailed there in
-April. Lieutenant-Colonel Shipley, royal engineers, as also one
-sergeant-major, two corporals, twenty privates, and one drummer of the
-artificers accompanied it, the rest of the company not being available
-for the service in consequence of being greatly dispersed through the
-different islands. Surinam being very difficult of approach,
-Lieutenant-Colonel Shipley, on the 29th April, went on shore to procure
-tidings with respect to the best means of reaching the settlement. On
-returning, he reported that a body of troops might be conducted to the
-rear of Forts Leyden and Frederici. Accordingly, twenty of the military
-artificers with side arms and felling axes, ten of the 6th West India
-regiment similarly provided, a detachment of 140 men of the 64th
-regiment, and about thirty seamen, all under Brigadier-General Hughes,
-landed on the night of the 29th, and proceeded through almost impassable
-woods, led by negro guides, to the place of assault. After five hours'
-laborious marching, the stormers arrived near the rear of Frederici
-Battery, which was gallantly taken, as was also Fort Leyden soon after;
-and Surinam surrendered on the 5th May. “No obstacle,” says the despatch
-of Sir Charles Green, “could damp the enterprising spirit of our seamen
-and soldiers. They underwent great fatigue in executing these works,
-which, however, they cheerfully submitted to under Lieutenant-Colonel
-Shipley, who, as usual, was unceasing in his exertions.”[130] Severe as
-the storming is described to have been, only three soldiers were killed;
-of whom one was a military artificer,[131] private James Connolly, at
-the assault of Fort Leyden. Of the number wounded, no official account
-has been traced.
-
------
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 19 to 23 June, 1804.
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Ibid.
-
------
-
-Private George Mitchell, represented as a highly-meritorious soldier,
-distinguished himself in the assault, as, indeed, did the whole of the
-detachment. As well on the march as in the two successive assaults, he
-was conspicuous for his perseverance, promptitude, and bravery, and when
-entering Frederici with the foremost troops, was severely wounded by the
-side of his officer, Lieutenant J. R. Arnold, R.E., who led the storm.
-For his services on this occasion he was promoted to be corporal, and
-subsequently for the same reason to the rank of sergeant. He also
-received a present from the Patriotic Fund at Lloyd’s, in testimony of
-the opinion entertained of his services.[132]
-
------
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- In the subsequent campaigns of the West Indies he behaved equally
- meritoriously; and in garrison and the workshops always conducted
- himself well. Besides being an excellent mason and foreman, no
- artificer in the service, perhaps, had a better practical idea of
- mining, in which he signalized himself at the destruction of Fort
- Desaix, Martinique. After sixteen years' arduous service in the West
- Indies, he was sent to Woolwich and discharged in July, 1814.
-
------
-
-On the reduction of the place, the Batavian troops were released from
-their former allegiance, and at liberty to become either citizens in
-Surinam, or soldiers in his Britannic Majesty’s forces; but the barren
-and uninviting prospects that a captured country presented prevented
-many from settling, and they readily offered to enrol themselves under
-the British standard. Availing himself of the opportunity,
-Lieutenant-Colonel Shipley accepted the services of seventeen Batavian
-artificers and enlisted them for the company. Fourteen deaths were
-reported in the company during the year; and on the 31st December its
-strength was eighty-eight of all ranks.
-
-A fever of a very malignant character appeared at Gibraltar in August,
-and continued its ravages during the autumnal months. Brought in by a
-foreigner, who took up his abode in the vicinity of the married quarters
-of the royal artillery, the disorder was soon communicated to the
-latter; and, by the end of September, it spread with a rapidity only
-equalled by its virulence. Ere long the whole fortress was infested by
-the pestilence; and, as if to render the calamity more awful, it was
-preceded by an earthquake, which agitated the whole Rock. Out of a
-population computed at 10,000, including 4,000 troops, no less a number
-than 5,946 died between the 1st September and 31st December. So great a
-mortality in so short a period is unexampled in the history of that
-fortress.[133]
-
------
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- Sir James Fellowes ‘On the Fever of Andalusia.’
-
------
-
-The two companies of artificers in the garrison were early visited by
-the epidemic and but few comparatively escaped. Of those who were
-fortunate enough to bear up successfully against the disease, it was
-ascertained that the chief part had previously suffered from yellow
-fever in the West Indies. The artificers' barracks at Hargraves' Parade
-were a considerable distance from the locality where the disorder
-originated, and consequently, for a time, were free from fever; but
-several of the men having been employed in attending the sick civil
-master artificers of the department, at their own homes in the town, and
-the married families of the companies having unrestrained access to the
-Parade, infection was thus communicated to the single men in barracks;
-and the effect was seen too late to adopt any sanitary measures or
-restrictions to prevent its ingress. In August three men died, and in
-September ten, whilst the numbers affected by the malady were very
-considerable. By the beginning of October the fever had extensively
-spread; and all work in the engineer department being suspended, the
-companies were confined to barracks, and the families in quarters
-prohibited from appearing in the streets of the town unless from urgent
-necessity. Soon afterwards, to preserve their health, they were removed
-into camp at Beuna Vista. Nothing, however, could arrest the advance of
-the disorder: gloom and horror hourly increased, and in a very few days
-the sickness at the encampment far exceeded anything that had occurred
-at Hargraves', By the end of the month a mournful diminution had taken
-place, ninety men having fallen a prey to the epidemic! In November,
-providentially, the fever sensibly waned, and only twenty-three men
-died; and in December, after carrying off four more men, its influence
-ceased to be felt at the fortress. At the approach of the disease the
-companies mustered 263 of all ranks; but by the termination of the year
-130 had died; thus reducing the companies to the strength of 133.[134]
-Here it may be added, that the royal military artificers lost during the
-fever more men proportionally than any regiment or corps in the
-garrison.[135]
-
------
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- According to Sir James Fellowes, 229 men of the companies were
- admitted into hospital with the fever, of whom 106 recovered, and 123
- died; but as Sir James has omitted the statistics for August in his
- tables, the apparent disparity between the two accounts is reduced to
- the trifling difference of 4 only, a mistake which, doubtless,
- occurred from some inaccuracy or accidental omission in the
- information furnished to Sir James from the Ordnance Hospital records.
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- This statement is borne out by Sir James Fellowes. See p. 450 of his
- work ‘On the Fever of Andalusia.’
-
------
-
-Amidst so much mortality, great alarm and irresolution naturally
-prevailed; and whilst many excusably avoided all possible contact with
-the infected, there were not wanting men of humanity and courage to
-volunteer their attentions and services to the sick and dying. Several
-instances of signal disinterestedness could be recorded, and the names
-of not a few mentioned, who fell a sacrifice to their generous zeal; but
-the following men, by their exertions and unshaken devotion in the
-discharge of the onerous offices assigned to them, seem to have been
-regarded with peculiar admiration, and therefore deserve whatever notice
-can be accorded to their merits in these pages.
-
-Private John Inglis performed the important duty of orderly to the sick
-in the hospital at Windmill-hill, and to assiduous attention united
-marked kindness and tenderness, shrinking from no difficulty and
-dreading no danger. During the fatal month of October his watchfulness
-and exertions were incessant, and his patience and humanity were as
-conspicuous as his fortitude.
-
-Private James Lawford undertook the melancholy service of receiving the
-dead, both for the artificers and the artillery, and conveying them to
-the burying-ground near the Grand Parade. Horrible and hazardous as was
-this duty, he persevered in its performance with a coolness and
-intrepidity that was perfectly amazing.
-
-Private James Weir was the principal gravedigger, and attended to his
-appointment with unflinching ardour and self-possession. Surrounded by
-the pest in its worst forms, and inhaling the worst effluvia, he never
-for a moment forsook the frightful service, but laboured on, inspiriting
-those who occasionally assisted him, until the necessity for his
-employment no longer existed.[136]
-
------
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- What was most extraordinary connected with these daring fellows, was
- the fact, that throughout the epidemic, they enjoyed the most robust
- health; but, after its cessation, fearing that they were loaded with
- infection, and that a sudden transition to the garrison again would
- cause the fever to return, the authorities deemed it prudent to send
- the hearse-driver and gravediggers to camp at Beuna Vista, where,
- after about two months' quarantine, they were permitted to rejoin
- their companies.
-
------
-
-An attempt at invasion being daily expected from the French, earnest
-attention was turned to those parts of the coast of England upon which
-the descent would probably be essayed. Immense sums of money were
-accordingly placed at the disposal of the officers of engineers to carry
-into effect whatever projects might be approved for rendering the shore
-defences more secure. Increased exertions were, therefore, made in
-strengthening the permanent fortifications, enlarging the defences of
-Dover and Chatham, “constructing batteries at various points, building
-temporary barracks along the coast, and studding our shores with
-martello towers.”[137]
-
------
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1845, p. 483.
-
------
-
-Besides using all vigilance and exertion at the different ports where
-the royal military artificers were stationed, in furtherance of the
-general business of preparation and defence, detachments of the corps
-were constantly on the route from one place to another, erecting
-temporary or permanent works. In April, at the suggestion of
-Major-General Twiss, then commanding royal engineer in the Southern
-District, the party at Dover was much increased to assist in forming
-casemates in certain positions of the works on the western heights, by
-which to remedy the defects in the original construction.
-
-At Jersey, in the same month, every precaution was taken to render the
-island capable of resisting any encroachment from its turbulent
-neighbours; and all the batteries and forts, as far as practicable, were
-manned with ordnance. In the execution of this service corporal and
-master-carpenter Daniel Brown, described as “a worthy man and a useful
-artificer,” was killed by a fall from the top of Platte Rocq Tower.
-
-In September a small party was detached to Chelmsford, and
-superintended, under the direction of Captain G. Whitmore, royal
-engineers, the construction of a chain of temporary fieldworks,
-consisting of intrenchments, batteries, and redoubts, from Woodford
-Windmill to the windmill at Gallywood Common, a distance, by the line of
-works, of about two miles and a half. Various regiments of militia
-provided their contingents to execute these works, in which they were
-assisted by detachments from the royal waggon train and royal staff
-corps.
-
-About the same time another party was despatched to Eastbourne to aid in
-building the circular redoubt there, as also in erecting several
-martello towers on the coast, at points best suited to protect our
-shores. Fluctuating in strength according to the general emergencies of
-the service, this detachment continued to work in the Eastbourne
-district until the summer of 1817, when, after assisting in the erection
-of all the towers as far as Rye Bay on the one side of Eastbourne, and
-Seaforth on the other, it quitted the district and the men composing it
-rejoined their companies.
-
-At Woolwich, during the later months of the year, parties were specially
-engaged in preparing and fitting out bomb tenders for the Channel fleet,
-by casing their magazines, making racks for shot, and executing such
-other precautionary services as would insure them from explosion and
-destruction in action.
-
-Nor should the efforts made to carry on the recruiting with success be
-overlooked, since the steps taken were chiefly induced by the spirit of
-the times, and the anticipated wants of the coming war. In the previous
-year, after the treaty of Amiens was signed, the recruiting was
-suspended; but in June, 1803, it was resumed with an energy that
-promised to yield an abundant result. In addition to the old stations,
-several new ones were opened for obtaining candidates, and the bounty
-for recruits was increased to 14_l._ 3_s._ 6_d._ each! whilst the reward
-to the soldier, to stimulate him to exertion and vigilance, was
-augmented to 4_l._ 14_s._ 6_d._! The former levy money was ten guineas,
-but the improved premium amounted to nineteen guineas.
-
-Notwithstanding the great demand for men, every care was taken to
-receive none in the corps who were not in every particular fully equal
-to its various duties; and the officers employed on the service were
-specially enjoined to engage such candidates only as were “stout made,
-able-bodied, well-limbed, healthy, and active, of good character, and
-good abilities as tradesmen; not over 30 years of age, nor under 5 feet
-6 inches in height.” Under these restrictions, and as the call for
-mechanics in civil life was loud and pressing, only 53 artificers were
-received and approved of this year, leaving at its close 351 men to
-complete the corps to its establishment of 1,075.
-
-No better success attended the recruiting in the year 1805. Full
-employment was offered by the country to every artisan disposed to
-handle his tools, and the sources of enlistment, therefore, were almost
-choked up. In this extremity, as the corps was very much below its
-establishment, application was made to the different regiments of
-militia for candidates; and the effect was, that 134 volunteers—all
-tradesmen and miners—joined the artificers, in April and May, from
-forty-six regiments. After a short interval, a similar application was
-made to the Horse Guards to allow artisans from the line to enter the
-corps. His Royal Highness the Duke of York, acquiescing in the proposal,
-conveyed his commands on the 8th July to every battalion in the service,
-both at home and abroad, to have volunteers, to the number of two
-carpenters and three bricklayers from each, transferred to the military
-artificers. By this arrangement the corps, which was 112 men in arrear
-of its establishment when the order was promulgated, was rendered
-complete by the end of the year. To each volunteer received was paid a
-bounty of ten guineas. The total number of recruits and men transferred
-from the line and militia during the year amounted to 435.
-
-Filling up the corps in this manner was highly prejudicial to its best
-interests and general efficiency, so far as the transfers from the
-regiments of the line were concerned. Officers of those regiments were
-naturally averse to parting with their good men, and out of a batch of
-volunteers the five least reputable in every battalion, unless under
-extraordinary circumstances, were selected to be transferred. To prevent
-the reception of objectionable men, every precaution was taken by the
-officers of engineers appointed to this duty; but, with all their
-circumspection, some of the most abandoned characters were passed into
-the corps. With the different militias, however, this was not the case.
-All the volunteers were unreservedly surrendered to the
-recruiting-officer, who was at liberty to pick from the number those
-whom he desired, and subject them to whatever examination he pleased
-before accepting them. In this way some of the ablest mechanics and many
-of the best-conducted men and finest-looking soldiers joined the corps,
-and their behaviour and usefulness in after service furnished the best
-test of the advantages derived by receiving volunteers from the
-militia.[138]
-
------
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- This observation would appear to clash with the remarks of Sir Charles
- Pasley (note F, p. xvii. ‘Elementary Fortification’) upon the
- impropriety of enlisting militia-men; but after carefully tracing the
- history of many volunteers from that arm, the fact cannot be concealed
- that the transfers alluded to were decidedly beneficial to the corps.
- The best sapper, miner, and pontoneer, that ever served in the
- corps—perhaps the best in Europe—was a militia-man; and the name of
- Jenkin Jones, the faithful and zealous sergeant-major under Sir
- Charles Pasley at Chatham, now quartermaster at Woolwich, need only be
- mentioned, to verify the assertion and to corroborate the encomium.
- Quartermaster Hilton, the efficient sergeant-major to the corps in
- France under Sir James Carmichael Smyth, had also been in the militia.
-
------
-
-England had not yet taken any active measures against France, busied as
-she was in endeavours to protect her own shores; but as soon as the
-Powers of Europe had formed themselves into a coalition, under treaty
-signed at St. Petersburgh on the 11th April, to check the progress of
-Buonaparte, the British Government lost no time in giving effect to the
-engagement. Accordingly in that month, a body of troops under Sir James
-Craig embarked for the Neapolitan States to join with the Russians in
-expelling the French. To this expedition was attached a party of one
-sergeant, one corporal, and thirteen artificers of the Woolwich company,
-under the command of Captain C. Lefebure, royal engineers, which landed
-at Naples in November. Here the expedition remained inactive until the
-19th January, 1806, when, from the defection of the Russians, it was
-deemed prudent to withdraw the troops and proceed to Messina, where the
-military artificers landed on the 18th February, 1806.
-
-In October, another force was sent to Hanover, under Lord Cathcart,
-which, after it should achieve the liberation of that State, was
-destined to advance into Holland for the same purpose. One sergeant, one
-corporal, and fourteen privates of the Chatham company, under Captain J.
-F. Birch of the engineers, accompanied the expedition and landed in
-Swedish Pomerania the same month; but, by the time the force was
-prepared to enter into the contest, affairs were on the change; and
-Buonaparte having gained the brilliant victory of Austerlitz, the
-treaties of Presburg and Vienna followed, putting an end to the war, and
-leaving England alone an enemy to France. Unable, without assistance, to
-re-establish the independence of Hanover and Holland, Lord Cathcart’s
-army returned to England early in 1806, and the detachment of artificers
-rejoined the Chatham company in February of that year.
-
-
-
-
- 1806.
-
-First detachment to the Cape of Good Hope—Misfortunes at Buenos
- Ayres—Reinforcement to Gibraltar—Services at Calabria—Formation of
- Maltese military artificers—Increase of pay to royal military
- artificers—Augmentation to the corps and reorganization of the
- companies—Establishment and annual expense—Working pay—Sub-Lieutenants
- introduced—Indiscipline and character of the corps.
-
-
-In August of the previous year, an expedition under Sir David Baird
-sailed against the Cape of Good Hope, to which were attached one
-sergeant, two corporals, and seventeen artificers of the Plymouth
-company under Captain J. C. Smith of the royal engineers, who embarked
-on board the ‘Melantho’ transport. The artificers landed on the 4th
-January, 1806, with the artillery, and marched and encamped with them in
-the field; but Sir David Baird, conceiving that their services would be
-more beneficial in the castle after its capture, than in action, would
-not permit them to take part in the operations. They therefore halted
-about a quarter of a mile to the right rear of the position, and there
-remained until they marched with the troops into the castle. Ever since
-this capture, a detachment of the corps of varying strength has been
-employed in the colony, not only at Cape Town, but at many posts and
-forts at a considerable distance inland and upon the frontiers.
-
-Two privates of the Cape detachment under Captain Kennett, of the corps,
-sailed in April with the force under General Beresford against Buenos
-Ayres. Landing at Point de Quilmes on the 25th June,[139] they were
-present at the surrender of the city on the 27th following. After a time
-the Spaniards, recovering from the panic which lost them their capital,
-retook it with signal success, and those of the British not killed, were
-taken prisoners. Captain Kennett was among the former, and one of the
-artificers was wounded. On the loss of their captain, the two men were
-attached to the artillery and served in the action of the 12th August,
-1806, under Captain Alexander Macdonald, royal artillery: they
-subsequently were taken prisoners and remained so until January 1808,
-when they returned to England with the forces under General Whitelocke.
-
------
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- ‘London Gazette Extraordinary,’ September 13, 1806.
-
------
-
-To supply the casualties at Gibraltar occasioned by the fatal fever of
-1804, a detachment of 133 artificers,[140] under Captain H. Evatt, royal
-engineers, embarked on the 31st December, 1805, and landed at the
-fortress in February following. The strength of the companies was thus
-increased from 174 to 307 of all ranks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- With fifty women and forty children! More than, in _these_ days, are
- permitted to accompany a _battalion_ on foreign service.
-
------
-
-Sir John Stuart, who commanded the army in Sicily, now undertook, at the
-solicitation of the Court of Palermo, an expedition against the French
-in Calabria. The detachment of artificers at Messina, reduced to twelve
-in number, furnished ten men, under Captain C. Lefebure, royal
-engineers, to accompany the troops. They were present on the 4th July at
-the battle of Maida; and afterwards at the siege of Scylla Castle from
-the 12th to the 23rd of the same month. Shortly after the capture, six
-of the party returned to their old quarters at Messina, leaving two
-non-commissioned officers and two artificers under Lieutenant George
-Macleod of the engineers, to superintend the restoration of the castle
-defences. In October the four men rejoined the detachment at Messina,
-where the whole continued to be employed in various engineering services
-for several years.
-
-Artificers under military control and discipline being much required for
-the works at Malta, Lieutenant-Colonel R. T. Dickens, R.E., recommended
-the formation of three companies of Maltese tradesmen for the service of
-the engineer department; two to be stationed at Malta and Gozo, and one
-for employment in general duties in the Mediterranean, Gibraltar, and
-Egypt. English companies of artificers would have been proposed for the
-works of the stations named, had the efficiency and conduct of
-detachments previously sent from Gibraltar to Minorca, Sicily, and other
-parts of the Mediterranean, warranted it; “but,” says Sir Charles
-Pasley, “as the Gibraltar companies were, from circumstances, the worst
-in the corps, the detachments formed from them * * * * were found so
-very inefficient, that Maltese and Sicilians were preferred to Britons
-in the Mediterranean, for the important service of the royal engineer
-department.”[141] As well from this, as from other local[142] and
-economical considerations, the Government approved of the measure, and
-the royal authority for its accomplishment being obtained, the companies
-were formed on the 1st May.
-
------
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ note A, p. iv.
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- In the treaty of Amiens it was stipulated that _one-half_ the soldiers
- in the garrison at Malta should be natives; and although the treaty
- had been violated by Napoleon, Great Britain still regarded its
- provisions, in this respect at least, as sacred and obligatory.
-
------
-
-The Mediterranean or war company consisted of—
-
- 4 sergeants,
- 4 corporals,
- 100 privates,
- 1 drummer,
- 10 boys.
- ——
- Total 119
-
-and the companies for Malta and Gozo, numbered each—
-
- 2 sergeants,
- 4 corporals,
- 60 privates,
- 1 drummer,
- ——
- Total 77
-
-An adjutant from the royal engineers was appointed to the 1st company,
-and one, a foreigner—Matteo Bonavio[143]—to the other two companies at
-Malta and Gozo, to which was also added one sergeant-major and
-quartermaster-sergeant Guiseppe Sinerco, stationed at Malta. The total
-number of these companies with the staff amounted to 276. The pay of the
-war company was assimilated to that of the royal military artificers,
-while that of the other companies was fixed as under:—
-
- s. d.
- Sergeant-major or quartermaster-sergeant. 3 0 a-day.
- Sergeant 1 6 ”
- Corporal 1 3 ”
- Private, or drummer 1 1 ”
- Boy 0 6 ”
-
------
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- Styled, by local usage, “Assistant Engineer.”
-
------
-
-The adjutants received 3_s._ per day each extra,[144] and the working
-pay of the non-commissioned officers and men was divided into two
-classes of 6_d._ and 9_d._, which they received in addition to their
-regimental pay. The non-commissioned officers, who were foremen,
-received as working pay 1_s._ a-day each.
-
------
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- Of the regimental allowances of the foreign adjutant nothing is known,
- nor can any record be discovered of the uniform worn by him.
-
------
-
-These companies were formed into a corps with the title of Maltese
-military artificers, and, like the old artificer company at Gibraltar,
-remained a distinct and separate body. They were officered by the royal
-engineers. Their clothing consisted of a close blue cloth jacket with
-black collar and cuffs, and Ordnance buttons; open blue cloth pantaloons
-and a military hat and feather. The sergeants were distinguished by
-sashes, the corporals by chevrons, and the sergeant-major by a uniform
-like the sergeant-major of the English companies.[145]
-
------
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- In 1808 the companies were clothed in a uniform made of cotton,
- manufactured in the island, similar to the local corps. The facings
- were of black cloth. The sergeants and corporals were distinguished as
- before, and the sergeant-major still wore the _home_ uniform. The
- substitution of cotton for cloth was ordered on account of its being
- cheaper and better adapted to the climate, besides forwarding the
- views of Government, in aiding the sale of the staple commodity of the
- island, deprived by the war of its usual vents.
-
------
-
-This year Mr. Windham, the Secretary-at-War, warmly espoused the cause
-of the army, and ultimately obtained for it the redress he so earnestly
-sought. This was promulgated in the well-known Warrant called “
-Windham’s Act,” which increased the pay of the soldier while serving,
-and provided a liberal pension for him on retirement, corresponding to
-his infirmities and services. On the 1st September, the Act alluded to
-was extended to the royal military artificers, and the advantages
-conferred upon the corps were as under:—
-
- Total amount
- of
- pay a-day.
- Increase.
- d. s. d.
- Sergeant-major on the staff. 5¼ 3 11½
- Sergeant 3¼ 2 6½
- Corporals:—
- After 14 years 3¾ 2 4½
- Between 7 and 14 years 2¾ 2 3½
- Under 7 years 1¾ 2 2½
- Privates and Buglers:—
- After 14 years 2 1 4½
- Between 7 and 14 years 1 1 3½
- Under 7 years no increase 1 2½
-
-In the prospect of a long war, to provide reinforcements for the
-execution of the extensive works in progress at Dover and Nova Scotia,
-and to be capable, to a certain extent, of meeting the contingencies
-that might arise, a royal warrant was issued dated 5th September,
-sanctioning a reorganization of the corps for general service, an
-augmentation of two companies, and a small increase to each of the other
-ten companies.
-
-Under this arrangement the corps was distributed as follows, and the
-companies for the first time, appear to be distinguished by numbers;
-which, however, from the long habit of designating them by stations,
-soon became obsolete:—
-
- 1st. Woolwich Captain G. Hayter.
- 2nd. Chatham Major R. D’Arcy.
- 3rd. Dover Captain W. H. Ford.
- 4th. Portsmouth. Captain R. Fletcher.
- 5th. Gosport. Captain T. Fyers.
- 6th. Plymouth. Lieut.-Colonel T. Skinner.
- 7th. Spike Island Lieut.-Colonel Sir C. Holloway.
- 8th. { Jersey Captain J. Humfrey
- { Guernsey. Major J. Mackelcan.
- 9th. Gibraltar Captain H. Evatt.
- 10th. Gibraltar Captain G. Landmann.
- 11th. West Indies. Lieut.-Colonel W. Johnston.
- [146]12th. Nova Scotia Captain W. Bennett.
-
------
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- Sir John Jones states, evidently by mistake, that the corps was
- composed of _thirty-two_ companies.—Journals of Sieges, ii., note 38,
- p. 389, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-By the authority of the warrant alluded to, the establishment of each
-company was remodelled, the ranks of Sub-Lieutenant and second corporal
-were created, and the total of all ranks per company increased from 100
-to 126. Under the previous system of detaching men, the companies were
-mutilated, disordered and reduced; but under this enlarged organization,
-it was considered they would be more accessible, and better able to
-afford such accidental assistance as might be needed, without
-diminishing the companies to an inconvenient strength, or without
-particular detriment to the station. The subjoined detail shows the
-approved composition of a company at this period.
-
- 1 Sub-Lieutenant,[147] a new rank, with pay of 5_s._
- a-day.[148]
- 1 Sergeant-major.
- 5 Sergeants.
- 5 Corporals.
- 10 Second Corporals,[149] a new rank, pay fixed at 1_s._
- 9_d._ a-day.
- 30 Carpenters, including 4 top sawyers.
- 20 Masons, } including slaters, tiles, and plasterers.
- 18 Bricklayers, }
- 10 Smiths,
- 10 Miners,
- 4 Wheelers,
- 4 Collar Makers,
- 2 Coopers,
- 2 Painters,
- 4 Drummers.
- ——
- Total 126
-
------
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- Styled _Second_ Lieutenants in the warrant by mistake. The
- Sub-Lieutenants were junior to the Second Lieutenants of engineers,
- but held rank with Second Lieutenants of the line, according to dates
- of commission. This right was often questioned, but never, as long as
- the Sub-Lieutenants were attached to the corps, officially settled. In
- 1835 the position of a Sub-Lieutenant (H. B. Mackenzie), who had
- joined the line as paymaster being disputed, it was then settled that
- _Sub-Lieutenants_ were _junior_ to _Ensigns_.
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- Subsequently increased to 5_s._ 7_d._ a-day, and after seven years'
- service to 6_s._ 7_d._ a-day.
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- Holding comparative station with corporals of the line, according to
- date of promotion.
-
------
-
-The total establishment of the corps, including the adjutant and
-sergeant-major on the staff, amounted to 1,514, exhibiting an increase
-above the former establishment of 439 men; and its expense for one year,
-exclusive of the working pay and other miscellaneous allowances, reached
-the sum of 45,500_l._ 17_s._ 7¼_d._ With the three companies of Maltese
-artificers, the corps mustered a force of 1,790 officers,
-non-commissioned officers, and men.
-
-As a means of encouraging the men to exertion and good behaviour, their
-working pay was permitted to be increased, under the authority of the
-warrant before mentioned, from 6_d._ to 9_d._ or 1_s._ a-day. The
-non-commissioned officers invariably received the highest rate. None,
-however, could be advanced from the lowest to the superior rates without
-first being recommended to the commanding royal engineer at the station,
-by the junior officers, foremen, or overseers; and this system of
-rewards, except for special services, has been observed in the corps
-ever since.
-
-The sergeant-majors who received the first commissions had been in the
-artillery, and were distinguished for their good services and bravery.
-To their zeal and expertness as soldiers, they added an intimate
-knowledge of drill and discipline—requisites of essential importance in
-the organization of a new force, but which, from the vague and
-indefinite character of the corps, became, almost necessarily, too
-temporizing and elastic to be sufficiently beneficial or respected.
-
-Efforts had on one or two particular occasions been made to avoid the
-faults and supply the omissions of earlier years; but the improvement
-before alluded to, had not reached the expectations of those who felt an
-interest in the corps. One obvious reason was, the nominal appointment
-of officers to companies, who were so incessantly shifted, that it was
-not uncommon to find a company passing under the command of three or
-four different officers in the course of twelve months;[150] and another
-was, the reluctance with which some commanding officers permitted the
-temporary withdrawal of the men from the works for the purposes of drill
-and discipline.[151] The free use of the means to train the men to
-subordination and the use of arms, to restrain them from irregularities,
-and fully to develop the organization and purposes for which the corps
-was raised, being thus interrupted, naturally tended to vitiate and
-lower its military pride, spirit, and appearance.
-
------
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- This may be regarded as a favourable view of the case. Sir John Jones
- states, “Each company was commanded for the moment by the senior
- Captain of engineers, who might happen to be placed on duty wherever
- the company might be; so that it was not unfrequent for a company to
- be commanded by five or six captains in as many months.”—Journal of
- Sieges, ii. note 38, p. 389, 2nd edit.
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ note a, p. iii.
-
------
-
-Bald and grey-headed non-commissioned officers with ages varying from
-forty-five to sixty-five, good artificers and foremen, but lacking the
-energy and demeanour of soldiers, were no rarities in the royal military
-artificers. Disinclined to learn, they but very imperfectly understood
-their military station, and seldom exercised their authority, except in
-the emollient guise of persuasion and advice. On all sides there was a
-yielding, that in some measure obliterated the lines of distinction
-between the different grades. Their interests seemed to be reciprocal
-and interwoven, and the best workman was generally esteemed the best
-man. Almost every military idea was sacrificed for “the works,” in which
-it would be hazardous to say, that they did not labour with ability and
-industry.
-
-To check the growth of these unmilitary principles and practices, to
-enforce respect for position and authority, and to assist in maintaining
-in the corps the exercise of proper discipline and drill, the
-Sub-Lieutenants were established. Their duties were like those of
-adjutants, whom they superseded, and were, therefore, held responsible
-to their Captains for the conduct, efficiency, internal management, and
-payment of their respective companies. This, however, was but a
-transient expedient. An instalment only of the good that was expected
-was realised;[152] and it was left for a later period to enlarge and
-perfect what in this year, though spiritedly commenced, fell
-considerably short of success.
-
------
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Ibid., note F, p. xvii.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1807.
-
-Appointments of Adjutant and Quartermaster—Captain John
- T. Jones—Disasters at Buenos Ayres—Egypt—Reinforcement
- to Messina—Detachment of Maltese military artificers to
- Sicily—Newfoundland—Copenhagen—Captures in the Caribbean
- Sea—Madeira—Danish Islands in the West Indies—Hythe.
-
-
-It having been determined to consolidate the appointments of Adjutant
-and Quartermaster to the royal military artificers, Major John
-Rowley[153] and Colonel George W. Phipps[154] resigned their offices.
-
------
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- In the earlier years of his appointment he was much at Woolwich, and
- personally superintended the affairs of the corps; but for some years
- prior to the new organization, his duties in London seldom permitted
- him to visit the head-quarters.
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- Colonel Phipps was never present with the corps. As Quartermaster, he
- performed his duties in London. In consideration of his relinquishing
- the Quartermastership, and also for his good services, he was granted
- by His Majesty an allowance of 10s. a-day.—‘Accounts of Ordnance,
- House of Commons,’ 1816, p. 31.
-
------
-
-To succeed to the vacancies thus created, Captain John Thomas Jones, an
-officer of undoubted ability and military experience, was brought from
-Sicily, and on the 1st January commissioned to hold both
-appointments.[155] Upon him, therefore, devolved the difficult task of
-arranging and directing the details of the new organization both at home
-and abroad, and of carrying into effect a general system of drill and
-discipline.[156] In this duty he continued until July, 1808, when,
-ordered on a particular service to the Asturias, he resigned the staff
-rank. From the time of the appointment of Captain J. T. Jones, the
-Adjutant was permanently stationed at the head-quarters at Woolwich, and
-his office also was established there.
-
------
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- ‘London Gazette,’ 20th to 24th January, 1807.
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii., 1843, p. 110. ‘Jones’s Sieges,’ ii.,
- note 38, p. 389, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-Early in the year an expedition was sent against Chili under
-Major-General Crawford, accompanied by a sergeant and ten artificers
-under Captain J. Squire, R.E. Instead of proceeding to Chili, counter
-orders were received, and Captain Squire and his eleven men sailed with
-the force to Buenos Ayres. Arriving at Monte Video on the 14th June,
-they were accordingly landed and took part in the disastrous attack on
-Buenos Ayres, in which all the artificers were taken prisoners, and so
-remained until January, 1808, when they quitted with the force under
-General Whitelocke.
-
-On the 6th March, Major-General Frazer, at the head of a small armament,
-sailed from Messina to dispossess the Turks of Egypt. To this force were
-attached, under Captain J. F. Burgoyne, royal engineers, four of the
-military artificers furnished from the detachment in Sicily, who
-embarked on the 19th February. Having in due time landed at Alexandria,
-they served at the capture of that city, also in the attack of Rosetta,
-and in the retreat to Alexandria. In September following these four
-artificers rejoined the party at Messina.
-
-In the meantime the detachment at Messina was reinforced by a sergeant,
-one corporal, and eighteen privates of the Gibraltar companies, under
-Lieutenant George J. Harding, R.E., who embarked at the Rock on the 14th
-April. With the exception of the non-commissioned officers, this party
-was composed of irreclaimable drunkards, worthless alike as artificers
-or soldiers.
-
-From the inefficiency of these men, the Maltese war company was ordered
-to furnish its contingent for service in Sicily, and accordingly a
-detachment of one sergeant—Evan Roberts—one corporal, and twenty-nine
-artificers, embarked at Malta on board the ‘Charlotte’ transport on the
-23rd, and landed at Messina on the 30th July. In the autumn following,
-the whole of the party with two men of the royal military artificers as
-foremen, were detached to Augusta and Syracuse, to be employed on the
-works under sergeant Roberts.
-
-Newfoundland now became a station for the corps. A detachment of
-eighteen non-commissioned officers and men, all masons and miners,
-embarked at Plymouth in May, on board His Majesty’s ship ‘Isis,’ under
-Captain George Ross of the royal engineers, and arrived there in July.
-Before the end of August, the detachment was further strengthened by six
-artificers from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Until proper accommodation could
-be provided, they lived in huts like the Esquimaux or emigrant
-fishermen, or under canvas in a dreary uncleared valley between Signal
-Hill and the sea. In some measure to relieve the monotony and mitigate
-the rigours of an inhospitable country and climate, permission was
-granted to the men to spread their nets in the waters near St. John, and
-to catch as much fish as was needful for the sustenance of themselves
-and families. Provisionally, also, the married portion of the detachment
-were allowed small allotments of land, which they cleared and cultivated
-at intervals, when they were not employed on the works. From these
-sources of occupation they were kept in constant industry and amusement,
-and their health effectually preserved and invigorated.
-
-Two sergeants, two corporals, six second corporals, and forty-one
-artificers, with Captain Fletcher, R.E., embarked at Woolwich for
-Copenhagen on the 29th July, and landed there the 16th August. In the
-bombardment of that capital they served under the immediate direction of
-Lieutenant-Colonel R. D’Arcy, R.E.; and, in returning to England, served
-as Marines under Lieutenant Bassett of the royal navy. The party
-rejoined their companies on the 7th November.
-
-One second corporal and three privates of the West India company were
-embarked in August, on board His Majesty’s ship ‘Blonde,’ V. V. Ballard,
-Captain, to act as artificers and seamen during a short cruise in the
-Caribbean sea; and while forming part of the crew of this ship, they
-served at the guns in the capture of the undernamed French privateers:—
-
- Guns. Men.
- 15th August ‘La Dame Villaret’ 5 69
- 16th ” ‘L’Hortense’ 8 90
- 14th September ‘L’Hirondelle’ 8 84
- 23rd ” ‘Duquesne’ 17 123
- 14th October ‘Alerte’ 20 149
-
-An expedition was sent to Madeira in October under General Beresford, to
-which was added a detachment from the Spike Island company of one
-corporal, one second corporal, and ten privates, under Captain A.
-Morshead, royal engineers. They landed in December, and were stationed
-at Funchal until May, 1812, when they were withdrawn and despatched to
-their companies in Portugal.
-
-In December, General Bowyer ordered a party of the West India company to
-be attached to his expedition about to sail against the Danish islands
-of St. John, St. Thomas, and St. Croix. Three sergeants, four corporals,
-and forty-two privates were accordingly selected, and embarked for that
-service on the 16th December; but the islands having surrendered without
-resistance, the detachment rejoined at Barbadoes on the 13th January,
-1808. A sergeant was left at St. Croix to superintend repairs to
-barracks, &c. Six mechanics belonging to the Danish service, taken
-prisoners at St. Thomas and St. Croix, enlisted into the company.
-
-Throughout the year a small party of the Dover company was employed on
-the works at Hythe, under sergeant Adam Cowan, and continued so occupied
-for several years.
-
-
-
-
- 1808.
-
-War in the Peninsula—Expedition thither—Detachments to the seat of war,
- with Captains Landmann, Elphinstone, Squire, Burgoyne, and
- Smyth—Captain John T. Jones—Reinforcement to Newfoundland—Discipline
- at Halifax—Services at Messina—Parties temporarily detached to
- different places—The queue.
-
-
-Napoleon had now fairly reared his eagles in Spain and Portugal, and
-compelled the reigning monarchs of those countries to renounce their
-thrones. To his brother Joseph he gave the sovereignty of the former
-kingdom, retaining for himself the sceptre of the latter. England, more
-indignant than alarmed at these spoliations, but eager to dispossess the
-invader of his acquisitions, at once willingly responded to the desire
-of Portugal to restore the dynasty of Braganza to the throne, and also
-tendered her assistance, uninvited, to Spain, to carry on the war.
-
-No sooner had the ministry determined upon sending succours to the
-Peninsula to effect the overthrow of Napoleon, than different
-expeditions were fitted out and sent to the seat of war. Small parties
-of the military artificers, selected from the various companies of the
-corps, were at the same time forwarded with these forces.
-
-On the 13th May, two miners, under Captain G. Landmann, royal engineers,
-were sent from Gibraltar to Cadiz with the division under General Brent
-Spencer, and were afterwards removed to the scene of active operations
-in Portugal.
-
-On the 18th June, one sergeant, one second corporal, and eleven
-privates, armed with small swords only, embarked at Woolwich under
-Captain Elphinstone, R.E., and joined the force under Sir Arthur
-Wellesley. Both these parties were present at the battle of Roliça on
-the 17th August, and Vimiera on the 21st of that month.
-
-A detachment of one sergeant, one second corporal, and twelve privates,
-under Captains J. Squire and J. F. Burgoyne, royal engineers, was
-forwarded on the 29th April with Sir John Moore’s army to Gottenburg to
-assist the Swedes against the Russians. The arms and appointments of the
-corps were taken from them, and they were supplied for defence with a
-short hanger sword. Several of the party had already been on service at
-Buenos Ayres under Captain Squire, and were again solicited by that
-officer for this expedition. The rest were men specially selected for
-the duty, both on account of their abilities and conduct as artificers
-and soldiers. After the force was recalled from its inactivity in
-Sweden, the detachment of artificers accompanied it to Portugal.
-
-About this period three artificers proceeded to the Peninsula with Sir
-David Baird’s division, and one man was attached to the force under Sir
-Harry Burrard.
-
-In September, one corporal, one second corporal, and fourteen privates
-embarked for Spain on board the ‘Sisters’ transport under the command of
-Captain J. Carmichael Smyth, R.E., and joined the army under Sir John
-Moore in November.
-
-The total artificer force in the Peninsula, comprising six different
-parties, was forty-nine of all ranks. This number does not include
-Captain J. T. Jones, the adjutant, who quitted Woolwich in July for
-special service in the northern provinces of Spain under the orders of
-Major-General Leith.[157]
-
------
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- In the absence, on foreign duty, of Captain J. T. Jones, from July,
- 1808, to January, 1809, Sub-Lieutenant John Eaves performed the duties
- of adjutant to the corps with credit and efficiency.
-
------
-
-To reinforce the party in Newfoundland, a detachment of one sergeant,
-one corporal, one second corporal, and forty-six privates embarked at
-Portsmouth in June, and landed at St. John’s from the ‘Vestal’ frigate
-on the 18th July. Early in the following year the detachment was
-increased to the establishment of a company.
-
-Lieutenant Oldfield of the royal engineers—a painstaking officer—was
-removed to Halifax about this time and appointed adjutant to the company
-stationed there. Having previously held a similar commission at
-Portsmouth—the model station for discipline—he commenced his duties with
-a favourable prestige. The materials he had to work upon were old in
-years, misshapen from habit and labour, and somewhat addicted to the
-prevailing vice of intemperance; but even these worn-out men he moulded
-by his once a-week drill into an appearance which enabled them to march
-past creditably with the Line on the Sunday garrison parades. Most of
-the company had been many years in the Province, and though not very
-tight and tidy soldiers, were nevertheless valuable as workmen and
-specially useful as foremen when military working parties were employed.
-
-Both parties employed in restoring the fortresses at Syracuse and
-Augusta were recalled to Messina, and assisted to repair and improve the
-defences of that place.
-
-At the Cape of Good Hope parties were detached at intervals during the
-year to Stellenbosch, Simon’s Town, and Hout’s Bay; and at Halifax to
-St. Andrews and Fort Clarence. At the latter fort, the non-commissioned
-officer detached was employed surveying. From Newfoundland a detachment
-was sent to Cape Breton; and from Gibraltar, also, second corporal
-Thomas Paul and four privates were detached to Perexil, a small islet
-opposite the Rock between Ceuta and Apes' Hill, where they dismantled
-all its batteries, magazines, and storehouses. Parties were also
-employed at Hurst Castle and the Isle of Wight.
-
-The time-honoured queue, which had long formed a conspicuous appendage
-to the soldier’s head-dress, was abolished in the corps in August; and
-the closely-cropped hair of the present day, and small whisker extending
-to the lobe of the ear, were then adopted.
-
-
-
-
- 1809.
-
-Retreat to Coruña—Miserable state of the detachment on reaching
- England—Hardships of the stragglers—Capture of Martinique—Skill of
- George Mitchell at the siege—Fever in the West Indies—Reduction of
- the Saintes—Detachment to Portugal—Battles of Oporto and
- Talavera—Casualties in the retreat, and distribution of the
- party—Naples—Zante and the Ionian Islands—Term of service of the
- Maltese military artificers—Siege of Flushing—Services of the
- military artificers there—Gallantry, in the batteries, of John
- Millar, Thomas Wild, and Thomas Letts—Conduct of corps at the
- siege—Casualties by the Walcheren fever—Skilful conduct of Corporal
- T. Stevens in the demolitions at Flushing—Captain John T.
- Jones—Servants—Incidental detachments.
-
-
-Excepting the two miners with General Spencer, the whole of the royal
-military artificers in Spain joined Sir John Moore’s army. When the
-force was put in motion, the senior sergeant of the detachment was left
-at Lisbon for special duty. The remainder accompanied the army in the
-retreat, and with the exception of two men taken prisoners and seven
-stragglers, were present at the battle of Coruña.
-
-Immediately after, the detachment embarked for England. The season being
-stormy there was no regularity in the arrivals. Some, therefore, landed
-at Portsmouth and others at Plymouth between January and March. They
-were destitute of every article essential to their comfort or equipment.
-Several were shoeless and clad in tatters and undistinguishable
-uniforms; while the majority, haggard and attenuated, suffering from
-shipwreck, privation, and sickness, afforded indubitable evidence of the
-severe and arduous campaign, through which the necessities of war had
-recently carried them.
-
-Left to their own resources, the seven stragglers retraced their steps,
-between 300 and 400 miles, to Lisbon. In undertaking the journey, during
-a very inclement season, they encountered many dangers, endured frequent
-trials and hardships, and barely supported life upon the scanty
-offerings which chance and a ransacked country afforded them.
-
-On the 28th January, three sergeants and seventy-one rank and file of
-the West India company, under the command of Brigadier-General Shipley,
-embarked at Barbadoes with Lieutenant-General Beckwith’s expedition and
-landed at Martinique on the 30th. The company was further increased by a
-sergeant, three corporals, and seventeen artificers under Lieutenant
-Robert Thomson, royal engineers, who embarked at Halifax, Nova-Scotia,
-with Lieutenant-General Sir George Prevost’s division. Both parties,
-when not engaged as overseers, were employed in the general labour of
-the trenches and the park, and performed the duties allotted to them,
-particularly in the destruction of Forts Bourbon and Desaix, with
-activity and zeal. Several non-commissioned officers and men were
-distinguished by special commendation; and the skill of corporal George
-Mitchell gained for him the reputation of being the best miner in the
-service. Private George Thomas was killed 22nd February in the advanced
-battery before Fort Bourbon. After the surrender of Martinique it became
-the head-quarters of the company. The Nova Scotia party returned with
-Sir George Prevost and landed at Halifax the 17th April. During the
-operations the rains were heavy and incessant, and the men being much
-exposed, fevers and dysentery were rife among them. By the end of the
-year, twenty-one of the company had died and five were invalided.
-
-In April, two sergeants and seventeen rank and file were present at the
-reduction of the Saintes under the command of Lieutenant Hobbs, R.E.,
-and were employed during the service in the construction of the required
-batteries, magazines, &c. The party returned to Martinique the latter
-end of the month.
-
-A detachment of one sergeant and eighteen rank and file embarked at
-Portsmouth, on the 14th March, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel
-Fletcher, for Portugal, and arrived at Lisbon on the 5th April. It was
-composed of men chosen from the Portsmouth and Gosport companies, among
-whom were several who had served in the previous campaign. Writing from
-Portsmouth, the Colonel says, “I find that all the men now here, who
-were with me before, are very anxious to go out again, but one cannot
-ask for everybody.” On arriving at Lisbon the party was joined by a
-sergeant and the seven stragglers of the Coruna party. It was thus
-increased to twenty-eight total, and shortly after another private from
-England was added to the number.
-
-On the 12th May was fought the battle of Oporto: twenty-five men of the
-artificers were present. They afterwards repaired the wooden bridge
-which led into the town. Moving with the army they mustered at Coimbra
-on the 1st June, and at Castello Branco on the 1st July. At the battle
-of Talavera, on the 27th of that month, fifteen of the detachment were
-present. Private Aaron Delacourt was taken prisoner while endeavouring
-to convey to the rear Captain Boothby of the royal engineers, who was
-wounded, and had his leg amputated. Of the artificers not present at the
-battle, two were at Lisbon, three on route to join the army, four at
-Abrantes, sick; and one on the Alberche. With the exception of two at
-Lisbon all joined at Talavera before the end of July.
-
-A severe retreat succeeded the battle, in which the party suffered very
-much. At Merida they were mustered on the 1st September. Lisbon was
-their head-quarters in November, at which time they were greatly
-scattered. A sergeant only was at Lisbon and the rest were distributed
-as follows:—one Abrantes, one Badajos, one Oeyras, four Sobral, and six
-Torres Vedras. Of the other artificers in Portugal, four were in the
-general hospital sick, and one a prisoner of war. The casualties since
-the opening of the campaign were six deaths, two missing, and two
-invalided to England.
-
-The company of Maltese military artificers at Messina was increased in
-April by seventeen rank and file from Malta. On the 1st June following,
-sergeant Roberts and thirty-eight men of the company, were attached to
-the expedition for the invasion of Naples. Twelve of the royal military
-artificers also went with the expedition, and served under the command
-of Lieutenant-Colonel A. Bryce, royal engineers, in the reduction of the
-islands of Ischia and Procida.
-
-Returning to Messina in August, six of the royal and eight of the
-Maltese artificers were added to the force under Brigadier-General
-Oswald, and were present, on the 2nd October, at the surrender of Zante
-and other Ionian islands. These parties continued at Zante until after
-the taking of Santa Maura in the next year.
-
-The Maltese artificers being enlisted for a term of three years only,
-their engagements expired in the summer. Upwards of sixty men
-consequently claimed their discharge, and in July the third Maltese
-company was re-formed.
-
-In the mean time a force of one sub-lieutenant—George Robinson—two
-sergeant-majors—Joseph Forbes and John Smith—ten sergeants, and about
-280 rank and file[158] had been selected for an expedition to Holland
-under the Earl of Chatham, to destroy the fleet and arsenals on the
-Scheldt. The youngest and most active men were chosen for the service,
-and were provided with swords and belts. The greater portion were also
-armed with muskets, under an impression that they would have to fight
-their way on shore. The detachment was divided into two operations to
-proceed against Flushing and Antwerp; the former under the command of
-Lieutenant-Colonel R. D’Arcy, R.E., the latter under Colonel Fyers, R.E.
-Both brigades embarked the 19th July, and having landed near Goes and
-Walcheren, a small force was employed in the operations in South
-Beveland under Captain Squire, R.E., and the remainder, with
-Sub-Lieutenant Robinson, were engaged in the bombardment of Flushing.
-The meditated attack on Antwerp was abandoned. Private Anthony Webster
-was killed at the seamen’s battery on the 13th August, and two men were
-wounded.
-
------
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- In Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ vol. ii., p. 269, 2nd edit., the number,
- including the sub-lieutenant, is shown as 261 only; at p. 415, the
- total of all ranks is stated to be 276; but both strengths differ from
- the actual force engaged.
-
------
-
-During the bombardment, fifty of the detachment were permanently
-employed in making fascines and gabions, and about eighty carpenters
-prepared and put up the splinter-proof magazines and laid the platforms.
-The remainder were distributed to the batteries as sappers and miners or
-overseers. One of the batteries which was required in a hurry was worked
-solely by the royal military artificers, and completed in twenty-eight
-hours.[159] Generally they attended to the more difficult and dangerous
-portion of the batteries, and besides repairing the parapets and
-platforms, improved the embrasures when injured by the enemy’s
-cannonade.
-
------
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ vol. ii., p. 279, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-In this service privates John Millar,[160] Thomas Wild, and Thomas Letts
-acted very praiseworthily in situations of great danger, and showed
-examples of courage, zeal, and attention to duty much beyond the rest of
-the detachment. On occasions when particular parts of the batteries were
-broken, these men fearlessly forced themselves into the embrasures to
-renew the work. The firing upon them was usually heavy. To effect their
-purpose with less interruption, they spread across the mouths of the
-embrasures, wet bulls' hides with the hairy surfaces to the fortress;
-and bearing as they did a resemblance to the newly disturbed earth, the
-enemy was deceived and withdrew their firing upon the work. The injured
-parts of the embrasures were thus restored with incredible dexterity.
-The two former were promoted to be second-corporals for their gallantry,
-and a similar rise was offered to Letts but he preferred to remain a
-private.
-
------
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- Was left property to the amount of 4000l. and purchased his discharge
- in 1810.
-
------
-
-The conduct of the detachment at Walcheren is thus noticed by the Earl
-of Chatham:—“The active and persevering exertions of the corps of royal
-engineers have been conducted with much skill and judgment by Colonel
-Fyers, aided by Lieutenant-Colonel D’Arcy.”[161] Elsewhere their
-exertions in the construction of the batteries are stated to have been
-indefatigable.[162]
-
------
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- ‘London Gazette.’
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- Hargrave’s ‘Account of Walcheren and South Beveland,’ p. 16, edit.
- 1812.
-
------
-
-After the occupation of Flushing, the fever common to the country set in
-with peculiar virulence; and the royal military artificers suffered very
-severely. Employed as they frequently were in conducting excavations in
-marshy and unhealthy situations, nearly the whole of the detachment were
-seized with the malady and thirty-seven died. Sergeant-major Forbes was
-of the number.
-
-By repeated removals of the sick, the detachment was reduced to about
-eighty of all ranks, who were employed, previously to the evacuation of
-the island, in the demolition of the basin of Flushing and the naval
-defences of the place under Lieutenant-Colonel Pilkington, royal
-engineers. Second-corporal Thomas Stephens was intrusted with the
-practical conduct of the destruction of one of the piers of the
-flood-gates. The task imposed on him was so ably executed, that when the
-explosion took place, the bottom of the pier was forced out and the
-superincumbent masonry fell without projecting a stone to any distance.
-Though only a second corporal he was appointed lance-sergeant on the
-spot for his skilful conduct.
-
-Captain John T. Jones, the adjutant, was removed from the royal military
-artificers, on the 1st July by promotion, and was succeeded in the
-appointment by Captain Gilbert Buchanan, R E. In reorganizing the corps,
-Captain Jones had effected considerable improvements and raised in a
-high degree its morale and military efficiency.
-
-The practice of employing men of the corps as servants to officers of
-royal engineers was discontinued in August. On active service the custom
-was found to be a great disadvantage. Stringent measures were therefore
-adopted to prevent its recurrence; and to this day, the officers are
-required to affirm quarterly, that they do not employ any men of the
-corps in their private service.
-
-Detachments are traced during the year at the following new stations:—to
-Alderney, seven rank and file were removed from Guernsey by order of
-Lieutenant-General Sir John Doyle. Two armourers were employed in the
-royal manufactory for small arms at Lewisham, and continued on this
-service for many years. The Eastbourne party was scattered along the
-Sussex coast, working chiefly at Hastings and Bulverhithe. The
-Newfoundland company gave a strong party for the King’s works at the
-south side of the harbour, which remained there for many months. A
-non-commissioned officer of the Halifax company was employed on a tour
-of inspection to Cape Breton and Prince Edward’s Island; and the
-detachment at the Cape of Good Hope was distributed to Simon’s Town,
-Hout’s Bay, King’s Blockhouse, and Muyzenberg.
-
-
-
-
- 1810.
-
-Capture of Guadaloupe—Of St. Martin’s and St. Eustatius—Torres
- Vedras—Anecdote of Corporal William Wilson at the Lines—Almeida and
- Busaco—Detachments to Cadiz—Puntales and La Isla—Destruction of Forts
- Barbara and St. Felipe, near Gibraltar—Santa Maura—Occasional
- detachments.
-
-
-On the 22nd January, Colonel William Johnston and Lieutenant Hobbs,
-royal engineers, with three sergeants and forty-five rank and file of
-the West India company, embarked at Martinique under Lieutenant-General
-Beckwith. The detachment was appointed to the fifth or reserve brigade
-under the command of Brigadier-General Wale; and having landed at St.
-Mary’s Capisterre, served at the taking of Guadaloupe.
-
-A small party under Captain Hobbs, R.E., afterwards accompanied the
-force under Brigadier-General Harcourt, and was present at the capture
-of the islands of St. Martin’s and St. Eustatius.
-
-The celebrated Lines of Torres Vedras, commenced in October, 1809, were
-fully completed late in 1810. The number of the royal military
-artificers employed in their construction never exceeded eighteen of all
-ranks, who were distributed in ones and twos throughout the whole extent
-of country to be intrenched.[163] Under the superintendence and control
-of their officers, they directed the labours of many hundreds of the
-peasantry. Some of the party were responsible for the efficient services
-of no less than 500 to 700 workmen. In this duty second-corporal William
-Wilson and private James Douglas rendered themselves conspicuous by
-their skill and activity. Both were promoted in consequence.
-
------
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- Jones’s Lines of Lisbon, 1829, p. 78.
-
------
-
-Corporal Wilson was selected by Colonel Fletcher, the commanding
-engineer, to be his orderly, in which capacity he served until the death
-of his chief at St. Sebastian. At Torres Vedras the corporal had charge
-of a work, and a party of the Portuguese Ordenanza Militia was placed
-under his orders to execute it. Two of the men were put to a task to be
-completed within a certain time; but regarding the work as impossible,
-they refused to comply and complained to their officer, who took their
-part and was inclined to censure the corporal. However, with more
-manliness than soldier-like propriety, the corporal offered to bet the
-officer a dollar that he would accomplish the task _himself_ within the
-time. The bet was accepted. Corporal Wilson stripped, easily won his
-dollar, and prevented the recurrence of similar complaints during the
-progress of the Lines.
-
-Four of the royal military artificers were attached to the army on the
-Coa, and were present at the action near Almeida in July, and the battle
-of Busaco in September. Retreating with the army to Torres Vedras, the
-four men rejoined the detachment, and the whole continued to do duty in
-the Lines until removed for more active service.
-
-On the 13th March, one corporal and eleven men of the Portsmouth and
-Gosport companies embarked with the force under Sir Thomas Graham for
-Cadiz. The non-commissioned officers were “careful trusty persons,” and
-the men “stout, able, and good tradesmen.” They landed from the
-‘Concord’ transport on the 24th March, and were commanded by Major C.
-Lefebure, royal engineers, until he received his death wound, which took
-place in April as he was descending the walls of the fortress of
-Matagorda during its evacuation. Meanwhile a reinforcement from
-Portsmouth increased the party to two sergeants and forty-eight rank and
-file; and in October it was again augmented, by artificers selected from
-the different companies, to three sergeants, nine corporals, five
-second-corporals, two drummers, and seventy-three privates, with
-Sub-Lieutenant R. Davie. The last draft landed at Cadiz from the
-‘Diadem’ transport.
-
-In defending the fort of Puntales, which sustained a bombardment from
-across the water, a portion of the company was always employed. There
-private Benjamin Hall was killed, and several privates were injured by a
-wall, under which they were mining, falling on them. The remainder of
-the company were occupied in fortifying the position of La Isla for the
-defence of Cadiz. Their particular duty consisted in making platforms,
-palisades, &c., and in acting as overseers to the military working
-parties of the line, assisted by artificers drawn from the regiments in
-garrison. The principal share of the work was done by task, which, being
-laid out beforehand, the royal military artificers showed the workmen
-their respective portions as soon as they arrived on the ground,[164]
-and superintended its correct execution, both in quantity and detail. At
-La Isla, the company was stationed at the park, and domiciled in one of
-the powder-magazines which had been made defensible.
-
-Under the direction of Lieutenant-Colonel Evatt and Captain G. J.
-Harding, royal engineers, Forts Barbara and St. Felipe, on the Spanish
-lines in front of Gibraltar, were demolished by a strong detachment from
-the two companies stationed at the fortress. The operations occupied a
-few months; and during the work the detachment was covered by a force
-from the garrison of 500 to 800 soldiers. In firing a mine near St.
-Felipe, private John Barber lost an arm, both eyes, and part of his chin
-and teeth. In springing another mine near Tarifa, private Thomas Hughes
-was killed.
-
-From Zante a party of five royal and eighteen Maltese military
-artificers sailed with the force under Brigadier-General Oswald, and
-were present on the 16th April at the capture of Santa Maura. This
-service effected, the detachment returned to Messina, leaving for the
-works of the newly-captured island a corporal and a mason of the royal
-military artificers.
-
-During the year, parties or individuals of the corps were employed on
-particular service abroad—at Ceuta, Tarifa, and at Sidney in Cape
-Breton; while, at home, men were detached to Hythe, Isle of Wight, and
-Northfleet. At the latter place the party was employed, from August to
-December, in surveying under Mr. Stanley of the royal military surveyors
-and draftsmen.
-
------
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers,’ iii., p. 94.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1811.
-
-Mortality in the West Indies—Strength and distribution of detachments in
- the Peninsula—Recapture of Olivenza—Field instruction prior to siege
- of Badajoz—Conduct of corps at the siege—Conduct of Sergeant Rogers in
- reconnoitring—Reinforcement to Portugal and duties of the
- detachment—Its distribution and services—Battle of Barrosa; gallant
- conduct of Sergeant John Cameron—Tarragona—Defence of
- Tarifa—Augmentation to corps and reconstruction of companies—Annual
- expense of corps—Command of the companies—Their stationary
- character—The wealthy corporal—New distribution of corps—Commissions
- to Sub-Lieutenants, and ingenious inventions of Lieutenant Munro.
-
-
-The West India company being gradually reduced to about fifty men, it
-was strengthened in March to 110, by the arrival at Barbadoes, in the
-‘Flora’ transport, of fifty-eight men. During the years 1810 and 1811
-the number of deaths in the company from yellow fever was thirty.
-
-The detachment of the corps in Portugal was increased to seventy-eight
-of all ranks, by the landing at Lisbon of two sergeants and fifty-seven
-rank and file under Lieutenant P. Wright of the royal engineers.
-Thirty-four of the reinforcement were forthwith sent to the Lines of
-Torres Vedras and the Almada position; and the remaining twenty-five
-joined the head-quarters of the army, under Captain George Ross and
-Lieutenant Stanway.[165]
-
------
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges’ vol. i. p. 377, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-While these movements were being effected, two artificers of the
-detachment were present at the recapture of Olivenza in April, under the
-command of Captain Squire, R.E.[166]
-
------
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- Ibid. p. 6.
-
------
-
-Soon after the reduction of Olivenza the siege party was augmented to
-twenty-seven, by the arrival at Elvas of twenty-five men under Captain
-George Ross. Of this increase not a man had ever seen the construction
-of a sap, battery, or trench. The whole were therefore daily drilled in
-the formation of fieldworks and in making fascines and gabions.[167] In
-these instructional operations they soon acquired sufficient knowledge
-to render themselves useful to their officers; and, at the same time,
-showed intelligence and alacrity in aiding in the construction of the
-flying-bridges across the Guadiana at Juramenha.
-
------
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ vol. i., p. 10, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-These twenty-seven men were employed in the first siege of Badajoz.
-Reduced by two, they were also present at the second siege of that
-fortress. On both occasions the diligence and exertions of the
-detachment were prominent; and, assisted by the line workmen, they
-quickly repaired the broken batteries and damaged embrasures. “Many a
-fine fellow,” says a well-known author, “lost his life in endeavouring
-to vie with the men of the engineers.”[168]
-
------
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii., 1831, p. 329.
-
------
-
-In the second siege, on the night before the storming, sergeant William
-Rogers, and three intrepid men of the corps, accompanied Captain Patton,
-R.E., on the dangerous service of reconnoitring the fords of the
-Rivillas, and the approach to the castle breach beyond the river. They
-conducted the examination for a time and then returned to the works for
-a file of men as a guard. With this escort they retraced their steps;
-but left it behind at a short distance from the breach, when the captain
-and his “trusty sergeant” went forward alone and completed the
-reconnaissance. In returning to the guard the captain stumbled, and the
-clanking of his sword drawing the attention of the French sentinels,
-they fired, and he fell mortally wounded. Sergeant Rogers protected his
-captain till he gained the escort, with whose assistance he succeeded in
-bearing him alive to the trenches. Captain Patton was able to make his
-report of the practicability of the assault and soon afterwards
-expired.[169] Sergeant Rogers died at Fuente Guinaldo in the following
-August. Of him Colonel Fletcher wrote: “he was an attentive, good
-soldier, and in every way a most estimable character.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ vol. i., p. 70, 2nd edit. ‘United Service Journal,’
- ii., 1831, p. 331.
-
------
-
-In May the detachment under Lieutenant-Colonel Fletcher received an
-addition of thirty-nine men; and on the 29th June a further
-reinforcement of sixty-three non-commissioned officers and men under
-Lieutenants Melhuish and De Salaberry, royal engineers. In consequence
-of this augmentation, the men of the infantry acting as overseers and
-mechanics on the lines, rejoined their respective regiments; and the
-posts thus vacated were occupied by the newly-arrived detachments of
-military artificers.[170]
-
------
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ vol. i., p. 90, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-The whole force of the corps in Portugal amounted in July to 8
-sergeants, 5 corporals, 16 second corporals, 3 drummers, and 145
-privates; total, 177. Of this number a comparatively small party only
-was kept with the army, whilst the remainder were distributed to the
-lines, Sobral, Oeyras, the Almada position, Peniche, Abrantes, Alhandra,
-Fort St. Julian, &c. In conducting the works at those places, “the
-abilities and good conduct of the men were found of the utmost
-advantage.” At Fort St. Julian particularly, where they were employed in
-the formation of four extensive jetties for the embarkation of troops in
-case of necessity, their skill and expertness were found of great
-importance. Sergeant John M‘Kay had the executive superintendence of the
-work under the direction of Captain Holloway, R.E.
-
-The detachment with the moving army was broken up into sections of five
-or six men to each division or corps, and one or other of them was at
-the blockade of Almeida, Fuentes d’Onoro, Albuera, Campo Maior, and the
-several other actions which occurred in the Peninsula during the
-campaign of 1811.
-
-From Cadiz Sub-Lieutenant Davie and fifty men under Captain J. F. Birch
-of the royal engineers, were detached with Sir Thomas Graham’s force,
-and landed at Algeciras 22nd February. Being armed with short swords
-only, Sir Thomas caused them to be furnished with such spare muskets,
-accoutrements, and ammunition as could be collected, to defend
-themselves if necessary on the march. They were then placed at the head
-of the column to remove obstructions and facilitate the advance of the
-army. On the 5th March, Barrosa was fought, and the detachment of
-artificers was present in the battle. Here sergeant John Cameron gave a
-manifestation of his zeal by leading to the charge a section of seven
-men. They pressed where the fight was warmest; and in a few moments lost
-one private—John Storie—killed and two wounded. The blue uniform of the
-artificers was distinctly seen among the red coats of the line, and Sir
-Thomas Graham ordered the instant withdrawal of the party to the rear,
-observing that he might want it for other work. The sergeant was to have
-been tried by a court-martial for taking the men into action without
-orders; but his bravery saved him.
-
-In June a second-corporal and four military artificers of the Cadiz
-company under Lieutenant Harry D. Jones, were attached to Colonel
-Skerrett’s expedition to assist the Spaniards in sustaining the siege of
-Tarragona; but the fortress fell while the British troops were in the
-roadstead. The party of artificers landed and occupied quarters in St.
-George’s Barracks, near Mahon, in the island of Minorca, and returned to
-La Isla in July.
-
-In the following October, two artificers were sent from Cadiz for the
-defence of Tarifa under Captain C. F. Smith, R.E. Two also were sent
-there from Gibraltar by Colonel Sir Charles Holloway, the chief engineer
-at the fortress. Ultimately the engineers' means were increased to
-seventeen men of all ranks, who were employed as overseers in
-strengthening the defences of the place, and they carried on their duty
-with energy and credit. One private was wounded on the 29th December. A
-detachment of variable strength continued at Tarifa until April, 1813,
-when it returned to Cadiz.
-
-A reinforcement of twenty men under Sub-Lieutenant Stewart Calder,
-sailed in November on board the ‘Tartar’ transport for Cadiz, and landed
-before the end of the year. The artificer force there now counted 101 of
-all ranks.
-
-Anholt, an island of Denmark in possession of the British, had been
-attacked by the Danes in March, and the fortifications consequently were
-much damaged. No officer of the royal engineers being available for the
-duty of restoring the defences, corporal Alexander Borthwick of the
-royal military artificers, an experienced mechanic, was sent there in
-His Majesty’s ship ‘Helder,’ with two privates as overseers. They landed
-in September and were quartered in Fort Yorke under Lieutenant John
-Bezant, the ordnance storekeeper. The marines on the island were
-employed on the works, and each received for his labour 2_s._ 4_d._
-a-day. They worked with attention and spirit. In six months all the
-authorized renewals and improvements were executed; and in May, a
-further sum of 3,700_l._ having been voted for completing the defences
-of the island, additional works were commenced to place the
-fortifications in a state to sustain a regular siege. In preparing to
-meet an apprehended attack on the island by the Danes, corporal
-Borthwick made various effective arrangements for the disposition and
-employment of the working parties, and gained the thanks of the Military
-Commandant, Major Torrens, royal marines. Shortly after, Admiral Martin
-being of opinion that the fortifications were sufficiently tenable to
-stand an attack, the works were suspended; and in August, 1812,
-Borthwick and his overseers returned to England. For his conduct and
-services at Anholt he was promoted to be sergeant; and a commission to a
-sub-lieutenancy was to have been conferred on him, but in the interim he
-became involved in some serious irregularities, which prevented the
-reward and ultimately ruined him.
-
-So many detachments had been provided for the colonies and the war, that
-appeals for reinforcements or more extended aid could only occasionally
-be attended to. From the Peninsula and elsewhere, therefore,
-representations had been made of the necessity for increasing the corps,
-and augmenting the engineers' means for carrying on with efficiency the
-duties of the department. The proposals at length met with due
-consideration; and on the 28th May a warrant was issued for an improved
-organization of the corps, enlarging its establishment to an extent
-commensurate with the precautions which the disturbed state of Europe
-rendered advisable.
-
-The warrant sanctioned an increase of 1,347 men, abolished the rank of
-company-sergeant-major, added to the number of the sub-lieutenants, and
-divided the corps into four battalions of eight companies, each company
-being constituted as follows:—
-
- Sub-Lieutenant 1
- Sergeants 5
- Corporals 5
- Second-Corporals 5
- Drummers 3
- Carpenters 15
- Masons 10
- Bricklayers 6
- Smiths 4
- Wheelers 2
- Collar-makers 2
- Cooper 1
- Miners[171] 30
- ——
- Total 89
-
-The establishment of the corps was fixed as under:—
-
- Staff { Adjutants[172] 4
- { Sergeant-majors 4
- { Quartermaster-Sergeants 4
- { Drum-major 1
- Sub-Lieutenants 32
- Sergeants 160
- Corporals 160
- Second-Corporals 160
- Drummers 96
- Privates 2,240
- ——
- Total 2,861
-
-exclusive of the three companies of Maltese military artificers.
-
------
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- A third of whom were to be gardeners, hedgers, or canal-diggers, but
- only to be enlisted on special authority from head-quarters.
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- These appointments were never conferred. The whole business of the
- corps was carried on by an Adjutant, who held his office independently
- of the battalions.
-
------
-
-The annual expense of the corps, not including working pay and other
-fluctuating contingencies, amounted to 87,736_l._ 14_s._ 3¼_d._ At this
-period 5 sub-lieutenants, 1 sergeant-major, and 130 men were employed on
-the recruiting service.
-
-In all practicable cases, general and field-officers were deprived of
-the command of companies, which now ceased to be stationary, but were
-removed by rotation of relief from one station to another, the same as
-the companies of the royal artillery. The employment of men on detached
-duties was also discouraged, and companies were composed of a convenient
-strength to enable them to move in bodies.
-
-Upon the stationary condition of the corps a celebrated officer of the
-royal engineers has made the subjoined correct remarks:—[173] “From the
-close of the American war till the year 1811, all the companies of royal
-military artificers were kept permanently fixed at their respective
-stations, both at home and abroad, where they remained for life, in what
-may, for military men, be styled a state of vegetation; so that they
-were, at that period, a vast number of men who had actually grown grey
-in the corps, who had never entered a transport, nor made a single day’s
-march from the head-quarters of their company. To the men at Gibraltar
-and other foreign stations the service of the corps was thus rendered
-almost equivalent to transportation for life. Everywhere they intermixed
-with civilians; they married in a proportion unknown in any other corps;
-so much so, that the number of women and children belonging to one
-company was often equal to that of a battalion of the line.”[174]
-
------
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ note a, p. iv., vol. i.
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- There was a William Painter at Gibraltar, whose affluence was
- something extraordinary. He enlisted into the corps in July, 1798, and
- though a man of very useful intelligence, only attained the rank of
- second-corporal in 1807. He tried to procure his discharge to return
- to his estate in Cornwall, but such was the pressure for men, his
- desire was negatived. His humble position, however, did not prevent
- his living in ease and luxury. He kept his servants, horses, and, it
- is said, his carriage, and entertained and enjoyed very good society.
- Well could he do all this, for, coupling with his own receipts his
- wife’s settlement, he possessed an income of _eleven hundreds pounds
- a-year_! He died at the Rock, August 13, 1811, aged 45 years. By his
- Will he left 5000_l._ stock to his two sons—John, and William Grible;
- 300_l._ to Sub-Lieutenant Falconer and his family, and a few smaller
- legacies to relatives and an attached servant, besides considerable
- landed property, houses, and the usual legal addenda of “messuages,
- tenements, and hereditaments” at Gwennap in Cornwall to his elder son
- John, “and his heirs for ever.” The widow, under a jointure, was in
- receipt of 550_l._ a-year.
-
- As if to show how likely fortune is to be overtaken by calamity,
- Sub-Lieutenant Falconer, five days after the death-bed remembrance of
- the corporal, was fired at from an open window by private Samuel
- Fraser. The ball luckily missed him, but whizzed sufficiently near to
- be alarming. The ruffian was sent to a condemned regiment in
- commutation for his sentence of one thousand lashes!
-
------
-
-Under the new arrangement the companies were distributed as follows:—
-
- Companies.
- Woolwich 6
- Chatham 2
- Portsmouth and Gosport 3
- Plymouth 2
- Dover 2
- Guernsey 1
- Jersey 1
- Cork 2
- Gibraltar 3
- Newfoundland 1
- Halifax 1
- West Indies 2
- Cadiz 2
- Portugal 4
-
-with detachments from the above to Eastbourne and the Sussex coast,
-Hythe, Cape Breton, New Brunswick, Ceylon, Cape of Good Hope, Sicily,
-the Ionian Islands, and Madeira.
-
-The companies at Cadiz were the sixth and seventh of the first
-battalion; and those in Portugal were the fifth, sixth, seventh, and
-eighth of the second battalion. At this time the corps counted a force
-of nearly 1,500 men. More than half were employed in foreign possessions
-and colonial defence. The remainder, distributed in home garrisons and
-the Channel Islands, included a large proportion of aged men, invalids,
-and recruits. By the end of the year the reconstruction of the companies
-was completed; and from continual accessions of squads of recruits,
-rapidly equipped and disciplined, the corps was soon in a condition, to
-a greater extent than heretofore, to meet such incidental necessities as
-might arise.
-
-Eleven sergeants were commissioned to be sub-lieutenants during the
-year. Some joined from the royal artillery. All were distinguished
-either as soldiers or artificers, particularly Sub-Lieutenant Munro, who
-was an “ingenious and skilful mechanic,” and his inventions, which met
-with general approbation, were attended with considerable saving to the
-Government. The captain of his company, in making a record of his
-acquirements, wrote that Lieutenant Munro “was the most zealous and
-intelligent non-commissioned officer whom he had met in the course of
-his services.”[175]
-
------
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- He invented an engine for nipping lead shot, used for years in the
- royal laboratory, but for which an impostor and spy, named De Haine,
- received a reward of 500_l._ While filling the office of inspector of
- ordnance stores, he made various improvements in the mechanical and
- intrenching tools. He also detected many extraordinary frauds in the
- deliveries made by contractors. In one attempted imposition only, he
- saved the Government 2000_l._ He designed and constructed a
- life-ladder, which was frequently used with success at fires, and an
- ingenious mortar-mill which occasioned a great saving of expense to
- the department. At Chatham he invented many useful tools, implements,
- and apparatus, and his services were repeatedly acknowledged in the
- order books of the establishment.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1812.
-
-Plymouth company instructed in field duties—Engineer establishment at
- Chatham—Major Pasley appointed its director—Discipline and drill of
- corps—Its character—Sir John Sinclair ex-private—Title of corps
- changed—Captain G. Buchanan—A sergeant acrobat—Cuidad
- Rodrigo—Exertions of a company on the march to the siege—Repairs to
- the fortress—Siege of Badajoz—Difficulties in removing the stores to
- the park—Duties of the sappers in the operation—Gallant behaviour of
- Patrick Rooney and William Harry—Also of a party at Fort Picurina, and
- of Patrick Burke and Robert Miller—Hazardous attempt to blow down the
- batardeau in the ditch of the lunette, and conduct of corporal
- Stack—Bravery of a party in mining under the bridge of the
- inundation—Distribution of the Peninsular companies and their
- services—Bridges of Yecla and Serrada—Reinforcement to
- Spain—Salamanca—Burgos, and boldness of Patrick Burke and Andrew
- Alexander at the siege—Bridge of Alba—Carthagena—Reinforcement to
- Cadiz; action at Seville—Reinforcement to the Peninsula and
- distribution of the sappers—Green Island—Tarragona—First detachment to
- Bermuda.
-
-
-Major Pasley, R.E., on his appointment to the Plymouth station,
-occasionally practised his company in sapping and mining. He was one of
-those officers who took pains to improve the military appearance and
-efficiency of his men, and to make them useful either for home or
-foreign employment. He is believed to have been the first officer who
-represented the advantage of training the corps in the construction of
-military field-works.
-
-After the failure of Badajoz in 1811 the necessity of this measure was
-strongly advocated by the war officers. Then it was recommended to form
-a corps under the name of royal sappers and miners, to be composed of
-six companies chosen from the royal military artificers, which after
-receiving some instruction in the art, was to be sent to the Peninsula
-to aid the troops in their future siege operations.[176] Early in this
-year [1812] the suggestion was repeated by Sir Richard Fletcher; and
-Lord Wellington having also, in the most forcible manner, brought the
-subject to the notice of the Secretary of State,[177] a warrant was
-issued under date of the 23rd April for the formation of an
-establishment for instructing the corps in military field-works.
-
------
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ 2nd edit., ii., p. 390.
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ 1845, v., p. 508.
-
------
-
-Lord Mulgrave, the Master-General, selected Chatham as the most suitable
-place for carrying out the royal orders, and appointed Major C. W.
-Pasley director of the establishment. The exertions of that officer at
-Plymouth naturally singled him out for the post. The better to effect
-his purpose, he published for the use of the corps, elementary works on
-fortification, geometry, &c. of the greatest simplicity; and they have
-ever since been the text-books of the institution. In addition to
-sapping and mining, his system comprised bridge-making, pontooning, the
-use of ropes, mechanical appliances, and all other arts and
-contrivances, which the corps, in its connection with the engineer
-department, is likely to be called on to perform. “Uniting,” says Sir
-John Jones, “great zeal and unwearied perseverance with good talents”
-and judgment, Major Pasley “succeeded in extending the course far beyond
-these objects,” and not only “filled the ranks of the corps with good
-scholars, good surveyors, and good draughtsmen,” but enabled many, after
-quitting the service, to occupy with ability and credit, situations of
-considerable importance in civil life.[178]
-
------
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ 2nd edit., ii.. p. 392.
-
------
-
-The formation of the school at Chatham increased the means for
-discipline and drill. Other stations, stimulated by the example, paid
-greater attention to their enforcement. The injurious system of changing
-officers incessantly was now abolished; and the juniors, among a stated
-number of the second captains, first lieutenants, and second lieutenants
-of the royal engineers, were appointed regimental officers of the
-companies. Sir John Jones has recorded that “the men generally were of
-superior acquirements and well-disposed,” and the above changes had the
-best possible effect upon their general behaviour.[179] “By linking
-officers and men together,” he added, “and closely connecting their
-mutual interests, discipline and pride were given to the soldier,” and
-character to the corps.[180]
-
------
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- Among the recruits at this period was Sir John Sinclair, Bart., who,
- on the 12th August, 1812, enlisted in the name of John Smith. Through
- various misfortunes he was reduced from affluence to poverty. Noticed
- by Colonel Pilkington, R.E., for his uniform good conduct and
- attainments, he was promoted to the rank of second-corporal, and
- provided with a quarter at the main-guard in the royal arsenal. His
- lady sometimes visited him in all the pride of her station, but his
- own rank was as yet unsuspected. From a comrade—afterwards
- Sub-Lieutenant H. B. Mackenzie—he frequently borrowed plain clothes to
- elude arrest in the streets, and invariably proceeded to the Treasury
- by water to receive his allowance. He was at length dogged to
- Woolwich, and, on the 31st August, 1813, being taken, was thrown into
- the debtors' side of Newgate, from whence he was removed to the Fleet
- Prison, where, for a year and a half he was confined, and was then
- only released by an error in law. Thirteen months' sickness and
- distress followed his release, during which time he was supplied with
- means by an acquaintance of his earlier and happier days. All the
- while the whereabouts of John Smith was unknown, but, advised by his
- friend, he confessed himself a deserter, and in imploring pardon and
- indemnity for past errors, solicited to be received for life in the
- New South Wales Corps. The pardon was granted, and being relieved from
- further service in the sappers, he was again left at liberty to follow
- his own inclination.
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ 2nd edit., ii., pp. 390, 391.
-
------
-
-More fully to accord with its recognized duties the Master-General on
-the 4th August, ordered that the royal military artificers should be
-hereafter styled, Royal Military Artificers or Sappers and Miners.[181]
-
------
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- Sir John Jones, by mistake, vol. ii. p. 390, makes the alteration of
- the name of the corps antecedent to the creation of the establishment
- at Chatham.
-
------
-
-Captain G. Buchanan, the adjutant, resigned the appointment, and Captain
-Rice Jones, under commission dated 1st February, succeeded to it. During
-his period of office, Captain Buchanan, besides attending to its many
-official requirements and details, performed duty on the works like
-other officers of engineers. By his application and exertions he ruined
-his health. Captain Rice Jones was relieved from the duties of the
-district, and the pay of the appointment was increased from 6_s._ to
-10_s._ a-day.[182]
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- Soon after this change, an act of gross indiscipline occurred, which
- will afford a tolerable notion of some of the singular characters who
- held rank in the corps. A sergeant’s guard usually mounted in the
- sappers' barracks at Woolwich. One morning sergeant Millar was
- appointed to the new guard, and during the ceremony of “mounting,” was
- posted in front of it. Lieutenant Eaves, the officer on duty, gave the
- usual words of command. “Sergeant, to your guard, march!” Millar no
- sooner heard it, than he whirled his halberd in the air, and as every
- one stood amazed to see the upshot of this mad manœuvre, the pike
- turned point downwards and stuck in the earth. At this moment, to
- complete the extravaganza, Millar pitched on his hands, and with his
- legs towering erect in the air, paddled, with all the flexibility and
- steadiness of an acrobat, to his wondering guard!
-
-The siege of Cuidad Rodrigo began on the 8th and terminated on the 19th
-January when the fortress was carried by storm. In this siege eighteen
-rank and file of the royal military artificers were present, of whom one
-was killed and ten were wounded. In carrying on their duties they were
-sometimes annoyed by the presence of light balls thrown by the enemy
-into the sap. The instant they alighted some bold sappers, heedless of
-the peril they incurred, rushed to the spot, and in a few seconds
-extinguished them with sand-bags or smothered them by shovelling earth
-upon the flames.[183] The conduct of the party during the operations was
-praised by Lord Wellington.[184]
-
------
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ i. p. 369, 3rd edit., and note added by Colonel
- Harry D. Jones.
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ 1845, v., p. 476.
-
------
-
-To join the siege party, the fifth company second battalion of forty-one
-men, had been embodied at Alhandra from the different districts of
-Torres Vedras, and marched for Cuidad Rodrigo on the 2nd January. It had
-in charge a large assortment of intrenching tools to be used in the
-works before that fortress. The weather was bitterly cold, a
-considerable quantity of rain had fallen, and the roads were cut into
-deep ruts and covered with pools. Frequently the jaded mules dropped
-from fatigue; and to relieve them, the men were constantly compelled,
-either to lead them instead of the disaffected muleteers, or take the
-labour of the animals themselves. After a trying and toilsome journey of
-seventeen days, the company arrived in front of Cuidad Rodrigo on the
-night of the 19th January, but took no part in the storming.[185]
-
------
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- Sir John Jones, in his ‘Sieges,’ i. p. 130, 2nd edit., records, by
- mistake, the arrival of the company on the 15th instead of the 19th
- January.
-
------
-
-The above company and detachment were afterwards employed in restoring
-and improving the defences of the place. Paid by measurement for their
-labour, they greatly exerted themselves, notwithstanding the bitter
-weather to which they were exposed. Corporal James Douglas was intrusted
-with the charge of the restoration.
-
-In the siege of Badajoz from 16th March to 6th April, the military
-artificers bore an important part. There were present 115 of all ranks,
-being portions of the fifth and seventh companies, second battalion,
-from Cuidad Rodrigo; and the sixth of the second battalion from the
-Almada position. A company from Cadiz comprising men of the sixth and
-seventh companies, first battalion, did not join till nearly the
-conclusion of the siege. The company disembarked at Ayamonte and
-ascended the valley of the Guadiana on the Portugal side, partly by
-boats and partly by marching. No British soldiers, save this company,
-had ever been in that part of Portugal.
-
-All the engineers' means for the operation were conveyed from Elvas to
-Badajoz under charge of the corps, for which purpose 120 pairs of
-bullocks were pressed into the service. The effectual removal of the
-stores was accomplished under great difficulties. From the desertion of
-the drivers, taking with them their oxen, and the weakly condition of
-others, many of the sappers frequently yoked themselves to the abandoned
-burdens, and in carrying them through the Guadiana at the fords, were
-sometimes borne down the stream by the rapidity of the current. Nearly
-all the stores, however, reached the depôt at the appointed time.
-
-In the distribution of the men, a strong party was nominated for the
-duty of the park, to repair tools, make scaling-ladders, platforms, &c.,
-and the remainder, told off into seven brigades, performed good services
-as overseers and leading sappers in the trenches and the batteries.
-Sub-Lieutenants A. Wallace and R. Gibb who joined in January,
-volunteered their services as assistants in the trenches, and both
-discharged their duties “extremely well.” Their conduct was noticed in
-flattering terms in a letter to General Mann, the inspector-general of
-fortifications.
-
-Soon after commencing operations, corporal Patrick Rooney signalized
-himself by laying gun platforms in the day-time under a warm fire from
-the enemy. No less conspicuous was private William Harry, who opened in
-daylight under fire of the Picurina, the embrasures of a masked battery.
-In executing these dangerous services, their firmness and skill had the
-effect of stimulating the workmen to the prompt performance of similar
-exploits.
-
-At the storming of Fort Picurina the royal military artificers who
-preceded the columns, conducted themselves with the “greatest gallantry
-and coolness.” Particular mention is made of those who accompanied
-Captain Holloway of the royal engineers, in leading the reserve column
-to the place. Encumbered with ladders and axes, they broke through a
-line of palisades on the covertway, planted the ladders against the
-counterscarp, and then, descending into the ditch, moved the ladders
-across to the scarp with the greatest “steadiness and precision.”
-Instantly they mounted, and after tearing down the fraises to a
-sufficient extent for the escalade, ascended the ramparts and dashed
-through the embrasures into the fort. Private Patrick Burke, a bold
-soldier, took a leading part in the assault and was amongst the foremost
-that entered the place. On the parapet Captain Holloway fell severely
-wounded. Lance-corporal Robert Miller rushed to his rescue, and at
-imminent personal peril, guarded his body and bore him in safety to the
-camp.
-
-Late in the siege a hazardous attempt was made by Lieutenant Stanway,
-R.E. to blow down the batardeau in the ditch of the lunette for the
-purpose of drawing off the inundation. He was accompanied by an officer
-and twenty men of the royal military artificers, of whom lance-corporal
-William Stack gave proof of prominent zeal and daring. The
-powder-barrels were duly placed against the dam and fired; but the
-effect intended was not produced, and the party returned to the trenches
-without loss.
-
-In the final assault of Badajoz, selected men of the corps accompanied
-each of the columns to the breaches, bearing ladders, hatchets,
-crowbars, &c., and executed the duty allotted to them with the utmost
-bravery. After storming the lunette St. Roque, a party of the royal
-military artificers, under Lieutenant Wright, R. E. displayed expertness
-and courage in mining under the dam and bridge of the inundation. Of the
-general services and conduct of the sappers “during the operations of
-the siege and in its close,” it is recorded that they “distinguished”
-themselves.[186]
-
------
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ edit. 1845, v., p. 579.
-
------
-
-Privates William Bond and Edward Doran were killed, and five rank and
-file wounded at the storming. In the trenches, during the operations,
-corporal John Blackadder was killed, and Sub-Lieutenant Wallace wounded.
-Many others also were wounded, but the precise number cannot be traced.
-
-Soon after the capture, the detachment of the sixth and seventh
-companies, first battalion, returned to Cadiz, Major-General Cooke
-having represented the desirableness of maintaining the corps in
-adequate strength to carry out the defensive operations under his
-orders.[187] The sixth of the second battalion was attached to the
-expedition for besieging Tarragona,[188] and portions of the fifth and
-seventh companies, second battalion, remained at Badajoz to assist in
-the repairs of the breaches, and in improving the defences of the town.
-One private was killed by the unexpected explosion of a blast when he
-applied the match to fire it. The restorations were effected before the
-close of the year, and to mark the date, some masons of the corps built
-the number of the year with 24-pound shot in the escarp wall of the face
-of the bastion La Trinidad.
-
------
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- Ibid, v., p. 650.
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- In the Dispatch to the Earl of Liverpool, dated Fuente Guinaldo, 10th
- June, 1812, the Earl of Wellington states, “I have likewise sent from
- this country to Gibraltar Lieutenant-Colonel Jones and four subaltern
- officers of engineers, and two companies of military artificers,
- including all the sappers there are with the army,” to join the corps
- d’armée under Lieutenant-General Lord William Bentinck, “to make an
- attack on the eastern coast of the Peninsula, with the troops from
- Sicily.”—Wellington Dispatches; 1845, v., p. 706, 707. The above
- company, 92 strong, was the only one despatched from Portugal, but one
- of the Maltese military artificers from Messina was added to the
- engineers' means for the siege, which made a combined sapper-force of
- 134 strong.
-
------
-
-The bridges of Yecla and Serrada, which spanned the Yebra—a branch of
-the Douro between Salamanca and Cuidad Rodrigo—were mined in December
-1811 by Spanish miners, with a few privates of the sappers as overseers,
-under the direction of Lieutenant W. Reid, royal engineers. Owing to the
-flinty nature of the cement giving the compactness of rock to the
-structures, it required a fortnight’s unceasing toil—day and night—to
-drive the shafts. The mines were fired in April, following, when one
-arch of the Yecla was blown down, and a pier and two arches of the
-Serrada were destroyed.
-
-Sub-Lieutenant C. Booth and ninety-five men reinforced the companies in
-Spain under Sir Richard Fletcher. Nine men also joined from Madeira.
-Both parties landed in April increasing the artificer force to 273 of
-all ranks. All the effective men were attached to the different
-divisions of the army, or were dispersed on various duties throughout
-the country. Those remaining at Badajoz were instructed in sapping and
-mining under Lieutenant Harry Jones of the royal engineers.
-
-In June, nine rank and file were present under Lieutenant-Colonel
-Burgoyne, R.E., at the siege of the fortified posts at Salamanca.
-Private James Durant was killed in the trenches on the night of the 17th
-June, and four privates were wounded. Thanks for their good conduct in
-the siege of the forts was conveyed to them in general orders.[189]
-
------
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ 1845, v., p. 724.
-
------
-
-Eight of the corps were present in August at the capture of the Retiro
-at Madrid, and at the siege of Burgos in September and October. All were
-employed as overseers in the park and the trenches. Corporal M. Develin
-was killed, and the remaining seven were wounded. The whole party proved
-themselves to be good soldiers and skilful miners. Deriving their
-instruction, in great part, from the labours of previous sieges, they
-knew the best methods to achieve success. At Fort Christoval the want of
-experienced miners rendered it impracticable to crown the glacis and
-prevent the garrison removing the debris from the foot of the breach. At
-Burgos, on the contrary, though the assaults were frequent before the
-place fell, this handful of sappers, assisted by some miners from the
-guards, successfully worked up to the fortress, and formed effective
-breaches by mining, in the castle walls.[190] Private Patrick Burke, a
-distinguished stormer at Badajoz, was remarked for his usefulness and
-resolution in the explosion of a mine; and private Andrew Alexander for
-his valour in leading the workmen to crown the crater of a mine on the
-enemy’s glacis before the breach. The fifth company, second battalion,
-was sent in advance with stores for the siege but arrived too late to
-share in the operation.
-
------
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ notes by Colonel Harry D. Jones, i., p. 135, 377,
- 3rd edit.
-
------
-
-In the retreat to the frontier of Portugal a few men of the corps mined
-the bridge at Alba on the Tormes, under Captain Goldfinch of the
-engineers. An eye-witness who observed their exertions says, “In
-crossing the bridge, we found the sappers hard at work mining and laying
-barrels of gunpowder to blow up the centre arch.”[191] The bridge was
-accordingly destroyed to check the advance of the enemy. This small
-party also assisted in the hasty intrenchments thrown up to defend the
-castle, and was present in repulsing the attack on the place.
-
------
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ 2, 1829, p. 284, 285.
-
------
-
-In January a corporal and nine privates were detached from La Isla to
-Carthagena to strengthen the fortifications there. Private Thomas Grewer
-was killed in springing a mine. The detachment returned to La Isla in
-April, 1814.
-
-A draft of twenty-eight non-commissioned officers and men landed at
-Cadiz in April to reinforce the sixth and seventh companies, first
-battalion. In August following, a sergeant and ten rank and file were
-present with Colonel Skerrit’s force in the action at Seville on the
-27th of the month. They rejoined their companies in September.
-
-Late in the year Lieutenant Matson of the royal engineers, having under
-his command Sub-Lieutenants R. Turner and C. Gratton and 135
-non-commissioned officers and men, joined the corps in the Peninsula.
-Many of them had been instructed in the formation of military
-field-works. The total of the artificer force in Spain and Portugal in
-December, reached the following numbers:—
-
- Lisbon, Badajoz, and with the army in the field 303
- Alicant 92
- Cadiz 103
- Tarifa 11
- Carthagena 6
- ——
- Total 515
-
-including Sub-Lieutenants Wallace, Gibb, Booth, Turner, and Gratton.
-During the year the casualties in the detachment under Sir Richard
-Fletcher were, nine invalided and forty-three deaths. In May the number
-sick counted thirty-one; in December it was increased to sixty-one.
-
-At Green Island, opposite Algeciras, four privates were employed in
-repairing the defences early in the year under Lieutenant A. Brown of
-the corps. When completed they returned to Gibraltar.
-
-The first company of Maltese Artificers of forty-one total, and one
-smith of the royal military artificers, left Messina in June under the
-command of Major Thackeray, R.E., with the expedition against Tarragona.
-At Port Mahon, Minorca, they were joined by the sixth company, first
-battalion. Both companies soon afterwards landed at Alicant, and
-portions of them were employed on such occasional services as the course
-of events demanded.
-
-Bermuda was this year appointed a station for the corps. Two sergeants,
-one drummer, and fifty rank and file, embarked on the 21st August on
-board the ‘Catherine,’ freight-ship, and arrived at the island 20th
-November. The detachment generally were inferior artificers and
-ill-behaved men. Throughout the voyage they were discontented and
-mutinous; and after landing, animadversion and punishment for a long
-time had but little effect in checking their excesses and
-insubordination. Captain Cunningham, royal engineers, commanded the
-party.
-
-
-
-
- 1813.
-
-Designation of corps modified—Uniform—Working-dress—Arms—Mode of
- promoting non-commissioned officers—Rank of colour-sergeant
- created—Company to Canada—Reinforcement to Bermuda—Sub-Lieutenant
- Mackenzie appointed Town-Major there—Sickness at Gibraltar—Services of
- company in East Catalonia—Malha da Sorda—Services on the advance to
- Vittoria—Bridge at Toro—Blockade of Pampeluna—Pyrenees—Stockades near
- Roncesvalles—San Sebastian and services of the corps at the
- siege—Valour of sergeants Powis and Davis—Of private Borland; and of
- corporal Evans—Casualties in the siege—Restoration of the
- fortifications-Pontoon train—Bidassoa—Bridge across it, and conduct of
- privates Owen Connor and Nowlan—Vera—Nivelle, and behaviour of
- corporal Councill—Bridge over that river—Bridges over the Nive, and
- daring exertions of private Dowling—Fording the Nive, and posts of
- honour accorded to corporal Jamieson and private Braid—Strength and
- distribution of corps in the Peninsula—Recruiting.
-
-
-To correspond with the intentions of the Government with respect to the
-future duties of the corps, the title was again changed on the 5th
-March, from “royal military artificers or sappers and miners,” to “Royal
-Sappers and Miners.” Some mistrust and discontent were occasioned by
-this second alteration, but conciliatory explanations restored
-confidence and satisfaction.
-
-A change of dress followed the change of name. This originated with the
-war officers in the Peninsula. Working with the line at the sieges, it
-was considered desirable to assimilate the dress of the two services;
-and scarlet with blue facings was introduced to render the men less
-conspicuous to the enemy and less subject to danger. No material
-alteration was made in the cut and frogging of the coatee. For
-particular parades, the white breeches and long gaiters were continued,
-except in the Peninsula, where grey trousers and ankle gaiters were
-substituted. The chaco—a singular concoction from the German mitre,
-preserved in Hogarth’s “March to Finchley,” and the “smoke-jack”—was
-much higher in front than in rear and decorated with yellow cords and
-tassels. A short white feather, worn at the left side of the chaco, just
-peered above the curve of the fan. See Plate X.
-
-The working dress consisted of a plain red jacket with short skirts,
-grey trousers with red stripes, short spats, shoes with brass clasps,
-and a leather cap worn lengthways, or square, bearing on its front leaf
-in brass, the initials of the corps, and subsequently a crown and garter
-ornament. This much-disliked head-covering was a remote but unsightly
-variety of the cocked hat; and in lieu of tassels was furnished at the
-corners with black silk ribbon ties of some length. See Plate XI. Some
-companies wore white linen overalls, buttoned the whole length of the
-outer seam. At Cadiz, previous to the general change, the companies wore
-grey trousers with a black stripe down each outer seam, and a grey cloth
-forage-cap, trimmed with black braid, and the letters R. M. A. on the
-left side of the cap.
-
-Greater attention was now paid to arming the corps. Heretofore, in this
-respect, many irregularities had crept in. At Newfoundland the
-detachment was armed with swords, cutlasses, and accoutrements of every
-shape, saved from the American war. In the West Indies the companies
-used the shattered remains of old armouries and black accoutrements of
-various patterns. In Sicily the military artificers could only muster a
-few foreign cumbersome firelocks; whilst the Maltese artificers were
-unable to appear with a weapon of any kind. For a number of years the
-Gibraltar companies wore the obsolete accoutrements and cartouche-boxes
-of a disbanded Newfoundland regiment; and a party of the corps on its
-way to the Peninsula, did duty with pikes and blunderbusses. Among the
-sergeants the swords and belts were very dissimilar. Permitted to
-purchase their own arms, more attention was paid to fancy and ability of
-payment than uniformity. These and other anomalies were progressively
-removed from the corps in consequence of the improved method of
-officering the companies.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners Plate X.
- WORKING DRESS, 1813 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners Plate XI.
- UNIFORM. 1813 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-In March an important plan was adopted for the promotion of
-non-commissioned officers. All men at home recommended for advancement,
-were sent to Woolwich to be examined. If found competent as artificers
-and soldiers, they were especially instructed in a uniform system of
-routine and drill, and returned perfect to their companies. A few years,
-however, showed the expense and inconvenience of the system, and it was
-necessarily relinquished.
-
-In July the rank of colour-sergeant was granted to the corps. One was
-appointed to each company with the pay of 2_s._ 9¼_d._ a-day, and was
-distinguished by the badge of the open colour and cross swords on the
-right arm. Sixpence a-day was also added to the pay of the
-sergeant-majors, which raised it to 4_s._ 1¼_d._ a-day.
-
-The third company, third battalion, of eighty-one men under Lieutenant
-G. Philpotts, R.E., and Sub-Lieutenant James A. Stephenson, sailed for
-Canada on board the ‘Zodiac’ transport on the 23rd April, and landed at
-Quebec on the 5th June. They had been trained in the field duties of the
-department at Chatham, and were the first of the corps ever employed in
-the Canadas. Nothing satisfactory is known of their services; but they
-appear to have been much dispersed through the country, the greatest
-numbers being at Burlington Heights, Prescott, Point Henry, York, and
-Kingston. The last station was the head-quarters of the company.
-
-In the summer the detachment at Bermuda was increased to a company by
-the arrival of thirty men under Sub-Lieutenant Hugh B. Mackenzie,[192]
-from his Majesty’s ship ‘Ardent.’
-
------
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- In 1816 this officer was appointed Town-Major at Bermuda, and from the
- able manner in which he discharged its duties, was honoured with the
- confidence and approval of his patron, Sir James Cockburn.
-
------
-
-At Gibraltar the companies suffered much from sickness during the year.
-Ophthalmia was also very prevalent. In December a malignant epidemic
-appeared in the garrison and nineteen deaths occurred in the companies.
-Nine other deaths took place in the year, and twenty-four were
-invalided. The three companies at the Rock were now reduced from 267 to
-141 of all ranks.
-
-The sixth company, second battalion, attached to the Anglo-Sicilian army
-at Alicant, sent during the year portions of the company with three
-expeditions undertaken by Sir John Murray and Lord William Bentinck, who
-were present in the several movements and affairs of the campaign,
-including the action at the Biar Pass, battle of Castalla, siege and
-capture of Fort Belaguer, and the second and third sieges of Tarragona.
-Thirty-nine men of the Maltese sappers and miners accompanied these
-expeditions. Detachments of both corps were also cantoned, at different
-intervals, at Valencia; and thirty men of the company made, in the
-island of Ivica, a liberal provision of fascines, gabions, and
-platforms, for the last siege of Tarragona. After Suchet evacuated the
-place, and Lord William had marched to Villa Franca, the royal and
-Maltese sappers and miners commenced to clear and repair the breaches,
-and to restore, generally, the fortifications. Until April 1814 they
-continued so employed, when, the works having been placed in as
-defensible a state as before their recent destruction,[193] they sailed
-to rejoin the force under Lord William Bentinck in Italy.
-
------
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1844, p. 77, 78.
-
------
-
-With the exception of a few scattered detachments, the companies in the
-Peninsula under Sir Richard Fletcher were concentrated at Malha da
-Sorda, and in January the seventh company, first battalion, from Cadiz,
-also joined there. All were practised as occasion permitted in the
-construction of field-works under Lieutenant E. Matson, royal engineers.
-Sub-Lieutenant Gratton, who was appointed adjutant, drilled the
-companies and conducted the roster.
-
-On the army breaking up cantonments, the seventh company, first
-battalion, and the fifth and seventh companies, second battalion, with
-Sub-Lieutenants Calder, Gratton, and Wallace, were attached to the
-pontoon train. The royal staff corps also accompanied it. Both corps
-assisted in the formation of bridges for the passage of the army.
-Carrying the pontoons down the steep banks of the Esla was an arduous
-service, but the bridge was thrown across the river with promptitude.
-Without loss or material casualty, the companies reached Vittoria, but
-were not present at the battle. At Zamora and Toro parties were left to
-construct earthworks for cover in the event of a retreat. Others
-stationed on the Douro and the Esla, guarded and used the flying bridges
-over those rivers whenever required by the troops.
-
-The eighth company, second battalion, with Sub-Lieutenant Turner, was
-attached to the light division and encamped with the 43rd regiment. At
-night, while the Toro bridge was still burning, the company repaired the
-broken arch with ladders, trees, and planks, under the direction of
-Lieutenant Edward Matson, R.E.,[194] and was present at the battle of
-Vittoria on the 21st June, but not actively engaged. One private was
-severely wounded; and Sub-Lieutenant Turner received three shots about
-his person, but remained unhurt.
-
------
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- Sir W. Napier, in his ‘Peninsular War,’ attributes, by mistake, this
- service to Lieutenant G. Pringle, R.E.
-
------
-
-At the blockade of Pampeluna, from 25th June to 1st November, a
-detachment of twelve sappers and miners was employed and superintended
-the working parties under the direction of Major Goldfinch, royal
-engineers. Private James Napier was killed.
-
-The seventh company first battalion, with Sub-Lieutenant
-Calder, attached to the corps of the army under the command of
-Lieutenant-General Sir Rowland Hill, was present at the operations in
-the Pyrenees, including the actions at Maya and Roncesvalles.
-
-Under Lieutenant Peter Wright of the engineers, this company, assisted
-by working parties from the line, erected several musket-proof
-stockade-redoubts on the summits of the ridges in the neighbourhood of
-Roncesvalles; and as the weather was extremely cold, accompanied with
-rain and sometimes snow, the interior was so constructed as to serve the
-purpose of a barrack to shelter a garrison of about 200 men. Young trees
-were found in great abundance on the mountain sides, which were sawn in
-two for the work, and “the berms were filled up with a triangle of
-earth,” to prevent the enemy creeping up the slopes and firing into the
-loop-holes. Attention was also paid to providing the troops with
-sufficient sustenance and the means of defence for a fortnight. Water
-was obtained from a cask sunk in the centre of the stockade, and an
-ample supply of loaded shells was procured from a foundry in the
-neighbourhood, to roll down the mountain should the enemy attempt to
-pass at its base, or to hurl into the ditch should he assail the
-garrison. The stockades were also provided with small ordnance when the
-situation required a more powerful armament.[195]
-
------
-
-Footnote 195:
-
- Manuscript, Royal Engineer Establishment. The model in the Model Room
- at Brompton, showing the details of one of the stockades, was made
- under the direction of Sub-Lieutenant Calder.
-
------
-
-The fifth, seventh, and eighth companies, second battalion, and
-detachments of the sixth and seventh companies, first battalion, were
-present at the siege of San Sebastian from the 11th July to the 8th
-September. The second company, second battalion, joined there on the
-20th August from England, and was the first company in the corps that
-appeared in the scarlet uniform. All the men composing it had been
-instructed at Chatham, and were derisively styled “Pasley’s cadets.” The
-greatest number at the siege counted five Sub-Lieutenants—Gratton,
-Stratton, Turner, Wallace, and Johnson, and 305 non-commissioned
-officers and men. The eighth company, second battalion, with Lieutenant
-Turner, was posted on the Chofre hills, and the other companies on the
-isthmus. The men were divided into three reliefs; each relief was on
-duty eight hours, but when the works required to be pressed, the periods
-of rest were shortened to meet the emergency. The sub-lieutenants acted
-as assistant engineers. A large party of the corps did duty in the park,
-and the remainder were employed as overseers of the working parties.
-They also had to place the gabions, fascines, platforms, &c., open and
-repair the embrasures, and execute all services requiring more than
-ordinary skill, such as commencing the saps and leading their progress.
-In the early part of the siege the batteries and communications were
-wholly constructed by the sappers; but from the 16th July, these
-services, except in occasional instances of difficulty and danger, were
-performed by the line.
-
-In both assaults parties of the corps assisted in carrying and placing
-the ladders for the stormers; others bore axes, crowbars, and
-intrenching tools. In the second assault it is recorded, that the party
-with picks and shovels “long persevered, with cool intrepidity, to form
-cover on the face of the breaches, but in vain.” The assault, however,
-ultimately succeeded. As well in the trenches as at the stormings, the
-sappers and miners distinguished themselves by their usefulness,
-intelligence, and gallantry.[196]
-
------
-
-Footnote 196:
-
- Sir Thomas Graham, in ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ vi., p. 650, edit.
- 1845. Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii., p. 391, 2nd edit.; and Pasley’s
- ‘Elementary Fortification,’ note D, p. ix., vol. 1.
-
------
-
-Here may be given a little incident to show how cool were the sappers in
-carrying on their duties. Colonel Pasley has stated that “several of the
-embrasures of the breaching battery were cut in broad daylight, under
-fire, by a party of the corps under Lieutenant E. Matson, R.E., after
-the guns in a part of the battery previously finished, had actually
-opened against the fortress.”[197]
-
------
-
-Footnote 197:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Operations of a Siege,’ ii., p. 246, note.
-
------
-
-Another instance is equally worthy of notice. “At one time,” according
-to Major Reid, “the trunk of a large poplar tree completely stopped the
-progress of the men and defied all their efforts to move it, until a
-daring sapper gallantly jumping from the trench, stood exposed until he
-moved it from the head of the sap, and returned without being
-wounded.”[198]
-
------
-
-Footnote 198:
-
- ‘Instructions for the Defence of Fortresses,’ translated by Major
- Reid, R.E., 1823, p. 20.
-
------
-
-Striking instances of individual exploit follow, which are creditable to
-the soldiers whose names are associated with their performance.
-Sergeants William Powis and John Davis accompanied the first assault.
-Forced down the breach with the retreating stormers, they perceived
-Captain G. G. Lewis, R.E., lying badly wounded exposed to the enemy’s
-fire; and Davis, who but a few moments before had been wounded in the
-arm, returned with Powis to the breach and carried off their officer to
-the trenches. In effecting this gallant and humane act, Davis was a
-second time struck by a musket-ball, through which he lost an eye. By
-Major Pasley he was reported to be “a man of extraordinary merit and
-abilities, and a most skilful and ingenious artificer.”[199]
-
------
-
-Footnote 199:
-
- From his perfect knowledge of the duties of field engineering, he was
- known among his comrades by the title of “Sap Major.”
-
------
-
-No less distinguished was private Hugh Borland at the second storming.
-In placing his ladders he discovered that they were likely to become
-useless, from the joints being insecure, and while in the act of binding
-the ends together with his braces—an act of supererogation which the
-service scarcely contemplated—a ball pierced the root of his tongue and
-killed him.
-
-Santa Clara, a rocky island off St. Sebastian, had been taken, and it
-was necessary to communicate with the officer of engineers there on a
-matter of great importance. It being broad daylight, no boat could
-venture across the bay without the certainty of being sunk. Corporal
-Thomas Evans therefore volunteered to execute the service. He
-immediately stripped himself, tied his cap round his neck with the
-despatch in it, and plunging into the stream, performed, under fire from
-the castle, this gallant exploit unscathed. The distance to the island
-was nearly a mile, and he returned with an answer in about an hour.
-
-The casualties at the siege were as follows:—
-
- At the sortie—one killed; private James Hicks: three taken
- prisoners,[200] one of whom, private Owen Connor, was wounded.
-
- In the trenches—four killed; second-corporals Findlay McDonald and
- Daniel Niblock, and privates Thomas Penhorwood and Peter Milne;
- Sub-Lieutenant Turner, wounded.
-
- First storm—five killed; privates Samuel Clarke, James Dunn, William
- Cormack, Jonathan Millar, and James Morris: one died of wounds,
- private Stephen Teaff.
-
- Second storm—four killed; second-corporal Henry Logan, privates
- Peter Walsh, John Flannagan, and Hugh Borland: twenty-nine
- wounded, of whom one died, second-corporal William Dodds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 200:
-
- Corporal Charles Ford was one of the prisoners. He was of a
- respectable family, and had a brother a clergyman in the Church of
- England, presiding over the cure of the parish of Kilbeaconty in
- Ireland. In an article in the ‘United Service Journal,’ headed,
- “Captivity in San Sebastian,” Captain Harry Jones, R.E., who also had
- been taken prisoner, alludes to this non-commissioned officer. “In the
- course of the day,” he says, “I was asked whether I would like to
- speak to a corporal of sappers, who had been made a prisoner during
- the sortie. I was delighted at the prospect of seeing one of my old
- friends, but was greatly astonished, in the afternoon, by seeing a
- fine tall young man, a stranger, walking into the ward, dressed in a
- red jacket. He was the first sapper I had seen in the new uniform, as
- blue was the colour worn when I was taken prisoner. Upon inquiring
- when he joined the army from England, he replied, 'Yesterday morning.
- I was put on duty in the trenches last night, and was shortly
- afterwards brought into the town by the enemy.'”—‘United Service
- Journal,’ 1, 1841, p. 198.
-
------
-
-Correct particulars of the wounded from the opening of the operations
-until the last assault cannot be obtained. The three prisoners taken at
-the sortie were returned to the corps on the 8th September. Not allowed,
-during their confinement, to throw up cover for their own safety, they
-were exposed in the castle, in the yard of the magazine, to all the fury
-of the siege.
-
-On the removal of the troops from St. Sebastian, the fifth company,
-second battalion, was left at the fortress. Under the orders of Captain
-Frank Stanway, royal engineers, it superintended a body of Spanish
-soldiers in reforming and restoring the fortifications. The company
-continued so employed for nearly five months after the abdication of
-Napoleon, and returned to Woolwich in September, 1814.
-
-The remaining four companies moved with Lord Wellington’s army, having
-in charge the stores and _matériel_ of the department. On the arrival of
-the pontoon train at Passages, a strong detachment of the corps was
-placed under the direction of Lieutenant Piper, R.E., to assist in the
-formation of the required bridges.
-
-In the passage of the Bidassoa on the 7 th October, the sappers threw a
-pontoon bridge across the river near Irun. It was soon afterwards
-carried away by the tide; but, on being recovered, was speedily
-replaced.
-
-About three miles higher up the river, at the foot of the Pyrenees, they
-also constructed a trestle bridge with a roadway of sleepers, covered by
-fascines and earth, under Captain Dickens, R.E. This bridge also was
-washed away by the violence of the current, and with it privates Owen
-Connor and John Nowlan, who at the time, were under the superstructure,
-fastening ropes from the land to the trestles to give stability to the
-bridge. Both these intrepid bridgemen, after a hard struggle, gained the
-shore.
-
-The second company, second battalion, under Captain Pitts of the corps,
-was present in the action at Vera, and afterwards threw up a line of
-breastworks at the gorge of one of the passes through the mountains, and
-constructed several other works about the position.
-
-At the battle of Nivelle, on the 10th of November, the four companies
-above mentioned were present but not actively engaged. Two or three
-small parties of the corps, however, had the honour of leading a strong
-force of the 27th regiment to the storming of a strong redoubt, under
-Lieutenant George West, R.E. They took with them long sand-bags, filled
-at the instant with fern, which they threw into the ditch; and jumping
-upon them, sprang to the parapet and entered the redoubt. Lance-corporal
-Edward Councill of the corps, led one of the detachments to the storm
-and dashed into the works with the foremost soldier, who was a sergeant
-of the 27th regiment.
-
-On the 11th November the second company, second battalion, threw a
-trestle bridge across the Nivelle, below Sarre, constructed from
-materials obtained from a farmhouse, under the direction of Captain
-Pitts and Sub-Lieutenant Stratton.
-
-The seventh company, second battalion, being detached to Socoa, to
-arrange the hawser bridge for the passage of the Adour, the three
-remaining companies were present at the battle of the Nive, and the
-actions in front of Bayonne, from the 9th to 13th December. For the
-passage of the _corps d’armée_ under Marshal Beresford and Sir Rowland
-Hill, the companies threw two bridges at Ustaritz, and repaired the
-shattered arches of another bridge at that place and one at Cambo. The
-first bridge thrown was made of pontoons under Captain Boteler, R.E., in
-which private William Dowling distinguished himself by gallantly
-swimming across the river with the sheer line, and securing it to a
-picket on the enemy’s side. When striking home his stake, he drew the
-fire of some French sentinels upon him, but returned unhurt. The second
-bridge resting upon eleven bays, was made by the second company, second
-battalion, under Sub-Lieutenant Stratton, directed by Captain Henderson,
-R.E., and formed from chance materials collected in the wood and the
-village. During the operations, another bridge was thrown by the sappers
-over a deep stream with a rapid current, beyond the Nive, and was formed
-of wine pipes and barrels, strengthened by two skiffs or chasse-marées,
-with a hastily-prepared roadway laid upon them.
-
-Previous to the battle a few expert swimmers were selected to find the
-fords of the Nive, and to note the exact rising and falling of the
-tides. Corporal Alexander Jamieson and private William Braid found the
-three fords near Cambo. In the passage of the troops these two men, by
-appointment, guided the columns of Generals Byng and Barnes across the
-stream; and for their coolness and steadiness in executing the service,
-were rewarded by the Generals. The former received two doubloons, the
-latter one.
-
-The four companies with the army were reinforced in November, by
-forty-nine men under Captain English, royal engineers, from England. On
-the 30th of the month, the total number in the south of France, at St.
-Sebastian, and Alicant, reached six sub-lieutenants and about 500
-non-commissioned officers and men. The number sick in the different
-hospitals amounted to between sixty and seventy. The casualties during
-the year were, killed fifteen, deaths thirty-three, missing five, and
-invalided thirteen. The head-quarters of the companies with Lord
-Wellington’s army, were at Cambo, Ustaritz, and St. Jean de Luz, but the
-men were greatly dispersed and variously employed, in making redoubts,
-batteries, and entrenchments, and in the preparation of materials and
-appliances for the formation of bridges.
-
-During the year the recruiting was carried on with great spirit. The
-number received by enlistment was 431, and by transfer from the militia
-334. Six sub-lieutenants, one sergeant-major, and 144 non-commissioned
-officers and men, were employed on this service in the United Kingdom
-and Ireland. The corps now counted a total strength of 2,373, leaving
-still to complete it to the establishment 484 men.
-
-
-
-
- 1814.
-
-Wreck of ‘Queen’ transport; humanity of sergeant Mackenzie; heroic
- exertions of private M‘Carthy—Quartermaster; Brigade-Major—Santona;
- useful services of corporal Hay—Bridge of Itzassu near Cambo—Orthes;
- conduct of sergeant Stephens—Toulouse—Bridge of the Adour; duties of
- the sappers—Flotilla to form the bridge—Casualties in venturing the
- bar—Conduct of the corps in its construction—Bayonne—Expedition to
- North America—Return to England of certain companies from the
- Peninsula—Company to Holland; its duties; bridge over the Maerk;
- Tholen; Port Frederick—March for Antwerp—Action at Merxam—Esprit de
- corps—Coolness of sergeant Stevens and corporal Milburn—Distribution;
- bridge making—Surprise of Bergen-op-Zoom—Conduct of the sappers, and
- casualties in the operation—A mild Irishman—Bravery of corporal
- Creighton and private Lomas—South Beveland—Reinforcement to the
- Netherlands—Review by the Emperor of Russia—School for companies at
- Antwerp—Detachments in the Netherlands, company at Tournai—Movements
- of the company in Italy and Sicily—Expedition to Tuscany; party to
- Corfu—Canada; distribution of company there, and its active
- services—Reinforcement to Canada—Washington, Baltimore, New
- Orleans—Notice of corporal Scrafield—Expedition to the State of Maine.
-
-
-Late in December, 1813, sergeant Richard Mackenzie with six invalids and
-their wives and children, embarked at Lisbon on board the ‘Queen’
-transport. Separated during a tempest from the convoy, the vessel, after
-a dangerous passage, arrived off Falmouth, and entering the harbour,
-anchored at about half a mile from the shore to await a fair wind to
-sail for Portsmouth. On the 14th of January, at night, a violent storm
-arose; and early next morning, the ship, snapping her cable and parting
-her anchor, drifted on the rocks off Trefusis Point near Falmouth. The
-unabated severity of the wind kept the vessel constantly bumping upon
-the rocks, and in a short time the ‘Queen’ broke amidships. As long as
-practicable the crew and passengers clung to the gunwale and rigging,
-but the long-boat being at last disengaged, numbers crowded into it.
-Sergeant Mackenzie was about the last who entered it; and even then,
-though the chance of life was hanging upon the prompt effort of the
-moment, he caught up a poor orphan boy shivering from cold and fright,
-and pushing him into the vessel _first_, followed after, and wedged
-himself in the bow of the boat. Without rudder or oars, the boat,
-scarcely able to hold the weight she bore, drifted to sea. Masses of the
-wreck floated about her and beat against her sides. Shock succeeding
-shock soon loosened her timbers, and the bottom giving way, the human
-freightage was cast into the sea. In less than two hours, out of 336
-souls, 195 were lost. Two of the number with three women and their
-children, belonged to the party of sappers. One was private James
-M’Carthy, who had gained the shore on a fragment of the wreck, and
-plunging into the sea again, perished in an heroic attempt to save the
-wife of a comrade.
-
-The commissions of Adjutant and Quartermaster, hitherto held by one
-officer, were separated in February; and quarter-master-sergeant James
-Galloway was promoted to be Quartermaster from the 1st of that month,
-with the pay of 8_s._ a-day, and 18_l._ 5_s._ a year for a servant. His
-dress and appointments were assimilated to those of the subaltern
-officers of royal engineers, with the exception of the head-dress, which
-was a cocked-hat, plumed with flowing cock-tail feathers. On the 20th of
-December following, the Adjutant, Captain Rice Jones, was advanced to
-the staff appointment of Brigade-Major; which rank has ever since been
-borne by the chief executive officer of the corps.
-
-After the passage of the Bidassoa, Captain Wells, with two men of the
-eighth company second battalion, marched to Santona to co-operate with
-the Gallican, or fourth Spanish army, under General Barco. The historian
-of the Peninsular war has stated, that _some_ sappers and miners were
-sent to quicken the operations of the Spanish officers, but a French
-writer, erring beyond all excuse, has magnified the _two_ men into a
-_whole_ battalion.[201] Under their captain, they superintended the
-prosecution of various field-works; and on account of his usefulness and
-intelligence, lance-corporal Hay was styled assistant engineer. Several
-villages in the vicinity of Santona were called upon to supply a certain
-number of scaling ladders for the operation, and corporal Hay, furnished
-with authority from General Barco, visited those localities,
-superintended the making of the ladders, and had them conveyed to the
-park. Both the sappers were present in the escalade of the fort of
-Puntal on the 13th February, and at the storming of the town and fort of
-Laredo on the 21st. Throughout the operations, corporal Hay was
-particularly noticed for his ability and zeal. Santona ultimately
-capitulated, and the two sappers rejoined their company in front of
-Bayonne.
-
------
-
-Footnote 201:
-
- Napier’s ‘Peninsular War,’ vi., p. 502, edit. 1840.
-
------
-
-Early in January ten artificers of the seventh company, first battalion,
-assisted by fifty Spanish soldiers, threw a very efficient bridge across
-a loop of the river Nive at Itzassu near Cambo, under the direction of
-Sub-Lieutenant Calder. The bridge was constructed by order of General
-Hill at the request of the Spanish General Morillo, to establish a
-communication with the rear and a brigade of his division which had not
-crossed the stream. A ferry had formerly existed at the spot by means of
-a small canoe which the enemy, in his retreat, had taken the precaution
-to sink. It was recovered by the sappers and turned to advantage in the
-operation. The site chosen for the bridge was accessible and convenient,
-being directly in rear of the division. For some distance along the
-shore the north side had a perpendicular face, high and craggy with
-projecting ledges; whilst the opposite shore was low and shingly, and
-inundated in wet weather. The bed of the river was rocky and uneven,
-showing such abrupt variations in its level, that piles or trestles
-could not be used for the formation. In some places the depth was 15
-feet; in others not more than 4 or 5. Boats or craft of any kind could
-not be procured, and the expedient of a bridge of casks was therefore
-resorted to.
-
-Barrels for the purpose—four feet long by two feet at the swell—were
-obtained from a wine manufactory in the village; chestnut planking,
-nails and bolts from different houses; trees from the adjacent
-plantations to form the framework and shore piles; and bars of iron
-grating, taken from the vaults of a country churchyard, were converted
-into a chain of 20-inch links, and stretched across the river. This
-chain was fastened at one bank to a huge fragment of rock, brought from
-a distance by means of a hastily-constructed sledge; and at the other it
-was held firmly by one of the ordinary methods. The number of casks
-employed in the formation were thirty-five, arranged in five floats or
-piers of seven each, two piers being lashed together at each end of the
-raft, 18 feet from either shore, and one in the centre with a space
-between of 12 feet from either float. The piers were fixed in strong
-cradles or frames, and by simple connections each maintained a
-reciprocal bearing upon the other. From the low or south shore the raft
-was approached by a jetty 120 feet in length, resting on young trees
-driven into the soil in a double row, 8 feet wide and 10 feet asunder;
-and from the other by a wide gangway supported on a sunken rock, which
-was heightened to the required altitude by a pier of stout masonry built
-at the moment. The superstructure consisted of planks secured to frames,
-and also to baulks longitudinally laid on the floats; and when all was
-completed, the bridge was held in position by means of poles, 8 feet in
-length, running from the piers and linking to small double chains, which
-again were moored to the great chain cable by a series of stout hanger
-hooks. The slopes to the raft at each end were easy and natural, and
-contrivances were effected which permitted the bridge to ride with the
-tide without disarrangement. On both sides a hand-rail was placed for
-the convenience of the troops, which gave it a neat and finished
-appearance; and though executed with the hurry which a pressing movement
-demanded, it was so firmly put together that it fulfilled in every
-respect the objects of its construction, without even sustaining a break
-from the force of the current or fury of the storm.[202]
-
------
-
-Footnote 202:
-
- Manuscript, Royal Engineer Establishment. The details of the
- construction of this bridge have been considered sufficiently
- interesting to be preserved in a model at the royal engineer
- establishment at Chatham.
-
------
-
-The above company with its sub-lieutenant, and the eighth company,
-second battalion, struck camp in February and moved forward with the
-army. The former company was attached to the column under Sir Rowland
-Hill, and the latter to Marshal Beresford’s. Both companies, numbering
-130 of all ranks, were present at the battle of Orthes on the 27th of
-February, but their services in the action were of little importance. A
-portion of the companies being attached to the pontoon train, assisted
-to re-establish the ruined bridge of Berenx during the night of the
-26th; and on the 27th, a small party under sergeant Thomas Stephens, who
-had distinguished himself in the demolition of the flood-gates at
-Flushing, destroyed a barricade in front of a bridge which led into the
-town of Orthes. In this little rencontre, sergeant Ninian Melville and
-private Samuel Needham were wounded, the latter mortally.
-
-These companies, still attached to the advancing army, aided in forming
-the several pontoon and flying bridges required for the passage of the
-troops, both on the march from Orthes and just before the battle of
-Toulouse. In this action, fought on the 10th of April, the two companies
-were present, but were not required to perform any service worthy of
-especial remark.
-
-During the winter of 1813, the seventh company, second battalion with
-Sub-Lieutenant Wallace, was detached to St. Jean de Luz to prepare a
-bridge for the passage of the Adour; and early in January,
-Sub-Lieutenant Stratton with the second company, second battalion, was
-sent to Socoa to hasten its completion. These companies with the
-artificers of the guards and staff corps, and large parties of the royal
-navy, worked incessantly at the undertaking under the direction of the
-engineers.[203]
-
------
-
-Footnote 203:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges’ ii., p. 107, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-In the middle of February, the necessary apparatus and stores being
-ready and every preliminary arrangement completed, the greater part of
-the two companies were shipped on board the chasse-marées, intended to
-form the bridge. In two vessels six sappers were embarked, in others
-three, but the majority carried only two, who were destined to cut “away
-the waste boards to render the deck level, and also to spike down the
-timber, prepared with grooves to receive the cables, the moment the
-vessels should be moored.”[204]
-
------
-
-Footnote 204:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ p. 109.
-
------
-
-On the night of the 22nd, the flotilla put to sea and encountered some
-stormy weather on the passage. In the afternoon of the 24th it neared
-the Adour, when the sea, tossed into foaming waves by a driving gale,
-wore an aspect of peculiar danger. A high and angry surf being on the
-bar and the tide furious, many of the native crews ran below in terror
-and refused to navigate their boats. Several fell on their knees and
-spent much of their energy in earnest devotion. At length, urged to
-their duty by the angry threats of the engineers and sappers, most of
-the masters yielded a reluctant but desperate submission, and steering
-into the channel, one vessel after another cut through the frightful
-breakers and soon gained the position chosen for the bridge.
-
-This hazardous service was not accomplished without loss to the sappers.
-In an instant, one vessel was engulphed on the bar, and second-corporal
-Patrick Power and private John M‘Knight, perished. Another vessel had
-safely outridden the surf, but was overtaken by an overwhelming wave
-that dashed her to pieces. In this wreck, corporal James Gorman and
-private William Bunn were washed to the shore, and after several hours'
-insensibility and exposure to cold, reached their company in a miserable
-plight, the next morning.
-
-In forming the bridge, the chasse-marées were anchored head and stern,
-about 30 feet apart; and as soon as the washboards were cut away and the
-grooved timbers spiked to the decks, the cables were stretched across
-the vessels from shore to shore, and the planks or superstructure
-quickly lashed to them. On the right bank of the river, the ends of the
-cables were secured to some 18-pounder guns half buried in the marsh;
-and on the left bank were hauled taut by mechanical ingenuity. From the
-violent heaving of the vessels it was unsafe to fix the planks in the
-intervals between them, but there were not wanting men who thought less
-of the danger than the prompt execution of the service. With skill equal
-to their assiduity, the companies laboured in completing the bridge,
-even working throughout the night, and the structure was fully ready for
-the passage of the troops on the 26th of February.[205] The boom was
-laid by the navy and completed soon after the bridge.
-
------
-
-Footnote 205:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii., p. 118, 2nd edit. As a reward for their
- services, most of the men that belonged to the flotilla received a
- guinea and a pair of shoes.
-
------
-
-Admiral Penrose, in his despatch of 25th February, thus notices the
-services of the sappers, “That so many chasse-marées ventured the
-experiment, I attribute to their having been one or more sappers placed
-in each of them, and a captain and eight lieutenants of engineers
-commanding them in divisions.”[206] The Admiral further stated, “that
-the sappers not only proved themselves good soldiers, but intrepid
-seamen.”[207] Major Todd of the royal staff corps, who assisted in
-planning the bridge, informed the author of the ‘Peninsular War,’ “that
-he found the soldiers, with minds quickened by the wider range and
-variety of knowledge attendant on their service, more ready of resource,
-and their efforts, combined by a more regular discipline, of more avail,
-with less loss of time, than the irregular activity of the seamen.”[208]
-Honourable mention is also made by the great historian of the
-intrepidity of the sappers; and in winding up his remarks upon the
-operation, he writes, “this stupendous undertaking must always rank
-amongst the prodigies of war.”[209]
-
------
-
-Footnote 206:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii., p. 117, 2nd edit.
-
-Footnote 207:
-
- Colonel Harry D. Jones, royal engineers.
-
-Footnote 208:
-
- Napier’s ‘Peninsular War,’ vi., p. 542, edit. 1840.
-
-Footnote 209:
-
- Ibid., p. 543.
-
------
-
-The subsequent charge of the bridge being confided to the royal staff
-corps under Major Todd, the two companies of sappers were removed to
-Bayonne to take part in the siege. Including the second company fourth
-battalion with sub-lieutenant Millar under Captain Blanshard, R.E.,
-which arrived from Portsmouth in the ‘Warren’ transport, and landed at
-Passages on the 16th March, the royal engineers had collected for the
-blockade four sub-lieutenants—Wallace, Gratton, Stratton, and Millar—and
-a body of nearly four hundred well-trained sappers and miners,[210] who
-were chiefly employed as overseers in conducting the execution of the
-required fieldworks. A strong party was on duty in the trenches when the
-sortie was made from the citadel on the night of the 14th April, but no
-casualties among the men were reported. Throughout the operations the
-sappers and miners, from their skill and exertions, gave the highest
-satisfaction to their officers.
-
------
-
-Footnote 210:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii., p. 126, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-At Bayonne the last blow of the war was struck; for as soon as the news
-of Napoleon’s abdication had arrived, hostilities ceased. In May the
-five companies at Bayonne and Toulouse marched from their respective
-cantonments to Blanquefort and Bordeaux, where they were encamped for a
-few weeks awaiting the general evacuation of the country. An expedition
-being ordered to proceed to North America, the second company fourth
-battalion embarked with it on the 27th May; and the other four
-companies, viz., the seventh of the first battalion and the second,
-seventh, and eighth of the second battalion, sailed from Poulliac on the
-22nd June, and landed at Portsmouth the 10th and 14th July, leaving
-fifty-five men sick in France. The casualties in these companies for the
-half year were thirty deaths and one missing.
-
-The sixth company second battalion was removed to Italy in April. The
-sixth company first battalion from Cadiz, and the fifth company second
-battalion from St. Sebastian, sailed from Spain the latter end of
-August, and arrived at Woolwich early in September. These two companies
-were with the last troops which left the Peninsula after the close of
-the war.
-
-The fourth company second battalion, counting eighty-two men, with
-Sub-Lieutenant T. Adamson under Captain R. Thomson, left Margate with
-the expedition under Sir Thomas Graham, and landed at Williamstadt the
-18th December, 1813. There the company suffered loss by the accidental
-burning of the barracks in which it was quartered. After removing the
-stores from the shipping, parties were employed in preparing fascines
-and gabions, in bridge-making, constructing a landing place of faggots
-for the disembarkation of the cavalry, and in removing the platforms and
-heavy mortars from the ramparts at Williamstadt for carriage to Merxam.
-
-These services being accomplished, the company was distributed to
-Klundert, Groat Zundert, Zandaarbuiten, Tholen, Steenbergen, and Fort
-Frederic near Lille. Among other duties the detachment at Zandaarbuiten
-formed, in a very expeditious manner, a bridge of country-boats over the
-river Maerk under two young lieutenants of engineers, which served for
-the conveyance of the heaviest artillery. The boats were of different
-shapes and sizes, collected for the occasion, and the materials for the
-superstructure were of irregular scantling, partly collected in the
-neighbourhood and partly felled on the spot.[211] At Tholen a corporal
-and eight men under Lieutenant Eyre, R.E., attached to the Prussians,
-built a battery on the bank of the river for the protection of a flying
-bridge; and at Fort Frederic a party restored a battery for two guns,
-which afterwards held an unequal contest with a French eighty-four gun
-ship, and prevented her proceeding to Bergen-op-Zoom with provisions. No
-less than forty-one, including the commander, were killed and wounded on
-board the man-of-war, while the casualties at the battery only amounted
-to one killed and two wounded.
-
------
-
-Footnote 211:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ note C, p. viii., vol. 1.
-
------
-
-Leaving sixteen men at Tholen and Zandaarbuiten, the remainder of the
-company, armed with short swords, felling-axes, saws, &c., and guarding
-an establishment of mules drawing about one hundred waggons laden with
-intrenching tools, commenced the march for Antwerp. They followed the
-royal artillery, and reliefs of twenty men were, by turns, repeatedly
-ordered to the front to remove abattis and other obstructions that were
-met with on the route. From intense frost and a heavy and continuous
-fall of snow blowing in their faces, they encountered many difficulties
-and suffered extremely during the journey.
-
-Merxam being taken on the 2nd February the company and a strong force of
-the guards and line, began the erection of batteries to attack the fleet
-at Antwerp. By command, no relief was permitted to the sappers, and they
-continued on duty for seventy-two hours without intermission. Their
-steady labours at the Napoleon battery of sixteen guns, and their skill
-in revetting the embrasures, and in attending to the more perilous parts
-of the works, were the wonder of both officers and soldiers. Sir Thomas
-Graham, in general orders dated Merxam, 5th February, did full justice
-to the zeal and exertions of the sappers, and stated, “that they
-deserved the highest praise.” Two privates were wounded.[212]
-
------
-
-Footnote 212:
-
- Here is a practical exemplification of _esprit de corps_. Whilst
- engaged in the attempt to destroy the shipping in the basin of
- Antwerp, his Royal Highness Prince William frequently visited the
- Napoleon battery with several military officers. On one of those
- visits a mounted veteran in the suite of the Prince approached private
- John Brennan, and said, “Sapper, will you hold this horse for an old
- guardsman?” Brennan, who was very busy at the time with his shovel,
- turned his face towards the officer, and feeling that as a sapper he
- was two or three removes above a groom, replied, “Egad, sir, I’d
- sooner be shot layin' sand-bags.”
-
------
-
-Sergeant William Stevens and corporal Thomas Milburn distinguished
-themselves by their coolness and bravery in superintending the laying of
-platforms and making a splinter-proof magazine under a heavy fire.
-Recommended by Colonel Carmichael Smyth, the commanding royal engineer,
-the former was forthwith appointed colour-sergeant, and soon afterwards
-commissioned to a sub-lieutenancy in the corps; and the latter was
-promoted to be sergeant.
-
-After the failure at Antwerp, the head-quarters of the company went into
-cantonments at Rosendaal, and parties were detached to Groat Zundert,
-Fort Henrick, Calmthout, Eschen, and Brieschaet. At Groat Zundert seven
-men under corporal James Hilton conducted some experimental bridging in
-the presence of Sir Thomas Graham and Colonel Carmichael Smyth, with the
-view of adopting the easiest plan for crossing ditches in future
-enterprises. Sir Thomas was struck with the simplicity of the corporal’s
-arrangement and the rapidity of its execution; and as a proof of his
-approbation gave him a Napoleon.
-
-On another occasion, that distinguished general took particular interest
-in the formation of a ditch bridge and even laboured himself in its
-construction. From the unevenness of the banks the baulks did not lie
-firmly. Private James McKay was in the act of obtaining the desired
-steadiness, when Sir Thomas took a spare spade, cut some sods, and
-assisting to place them in the required positions, only gave up when the
-work was satisfactorily accomplished.
-
-In the surprise of Bergen-op-Zoom on the 8th March, parties of the
-company were attached to each of the columns appointed for the attack.
-There were about forty men in all, who were provided with axes, saws,
-and crowbars, and also a few ladders to scale the walls of the fortress.
-At about half-past ten o’clock the attack was made. The sappers cut down
-the palisades, crossed the ditches, planted the ladders, and leading the
-way in the escalade, were the first soldiers on the enemy’s ramparts.
-They then pushed forward to remove any obstacle that opposed the advance
-of the assailants, and persevered in their several duties till the place
-was captured. A reverse, however, awaited the British: the enemy renewed
-the attack with unwonted vigour, and in a few hours regained the
-fortress. During these extraordinary operations the following casualties
-occurred in the detachment: Sub-Lieutenant Adamson was killed by a
-cannon-ball on the glacis when advancing. About twelve were wounded, of
-whom two mortally—privates John McKeer and James Munro—and ten were
-taken prisoners, and conveyed to Fynaart, but shortly afterwards
-released. Of the conduct of the sappers in this _coup-de-main_ Colonel
-Carmichael Smyth has left it on record, that the company conducted
-themselves with the utmost coolness and courage, and the Master-General,
-in a letter dated 2nd April, was pleased to express himself highly
-satisfied with the zealous conduct of the Royal Sappers and Miners on
-the above occasion.[213]
-
------
-
-Footnote 213:
-
- The gentle Brennan, about whom an anecdote is told in a previous page,
- very reluctantly quitted the ramparts. Finding, that to save himself,
- retreat was inevitable, he turned his back on the fortress, and with a
- scowl, such only as an Irishman could make, growled out, “Bad luck to
- the whole ov yees!” With this mild curse, so unusual in a hot-headed,
- free-spoken Milesian, he scampered down the ladder, escaped without
- wound or touch, and finally halted, still breathing the anathema, “Bad
- luck to the whole ov yees!” The incident is only remarkable for its
- freedom from those horrible epithets and curses so common in Irish
- execrations. Brennan was applauded for his bravery at the storming by
- Captain Robert Thomson, and his subsequent exertions and constancy in
- the restoration of the defences of Antwerp and Ypres, where he had
- large parties of Hanoverian troops and Dutch peasants under his
- superintendence, led to his promotion first to lance-corporal and then
- to corporal.
-
------
-
-The gallant behaviour of corporal James Creighton and private Edward
-Lomas is deserving of notice. After breaking through a palisade on the
-ramparts, they dashed forward and were challenged by a vigilant
-sentinel, who fired and shot Lomas in the thigh and then charged
-Creighton. Creighton parried the bayonet with his axe, and, seizing the
-Frenchman’s musket, a desperate struggle ensued. The sentinel, who was a
-powerful man, at length threw his antagonist violently to the ground,
-and stamping his foot on his breast, endeavoured to wrest the firelock
-from the corporal’s grasp. His strength spent, Creighton could scarcely
-maintain the contest, when Lomas, yet bleeding from his wound, rushed to
-the rescue of his comrade and struck the Frenchman with a pole-axe on
-the back of his head. The blow was fatal. Lomas now armed himself with
-the musket and ammunition of the sentinel, and pressing forward into the
-fortress, his resolution and daring were further signalized by his
-killing two other Frenchmen, and wounding two more. The latter he
-delivered over as prisoners of war to sergeant Thomas Milburn of the
-company, first breaking their muskets in their presence, and then
-dispossessing them of their accoutrements.[214] Corporal Creighton
-followed Lomas in the adventure, but was too much fatigued and weakened
-to be of material service.
-
------
-
-Footnote 214:
-
- Lomas was discharged in 1816 by reduction, and being a young soldier,
- received no pension. Some thirty years afterwards, he applied for a
- pension, and his exploits being still remembered, he was granted 6_d._
- a-day.
-
------
-
-Soon after the reverse at Bergen-op-Zoom, the greater part of the
-company was sent to South Beveland and attached to the engineer brigades
-of Captains R. Thomson and Oldfield, to be employed in the attack of
-Fort Batz. The night that ground was to have been broken news arrived of
-peace. The company returned into cantonments at Rosendaal, then changed
-its head-quarters to Horst, and in May assembled at Antwerp, where it
-remained, with the exception of some small detachments, to the end of
-the year.
-
-In July another company—fourth of the third battalion—under Lieutenant
-P. Cole, arrived in that city from Woolwich. It was sent there to assist
-in the demolition of its fortifications and arsenal, as, by treaty, it
-was decided that Antwerp should only be a commercial port. On the
-advice, however, of the Duke of Wellington, who inspected that great
-naval depôt on his way to Paris, the operations were suspended.
-
-While stationed at Antwerp both companies were quartered in the Hotel de
-Salm, where the French had established their head-quarters and sapper
-barracks. When the Emperor Alexander of Russia visited the city, the two
-companies were turned out with the garrison to receive the Czar, and
-specially attracted his majesty’s attention. In September the companies,
-under the command of Captain Oldfield, were inspected at Antwerp by
-Lieutenant-General Clinton, who expressed himself highly pleased with
-their appearance.
-
-The idea that the sappers should be properly educated, led, even in an
-enemy’s country, to the establishment of a school for their professional
-instruction, and they were permitted the privilege of assisting their
-officers in the preparation of projects for the destruction of the docks
-and several fronts of fortification. The drill too was strictly attended
-to, and to keep up their military spirit and bearing, they were marched
-two days a week into the country, and joined the troops at all garrison
-parades. Captain Oldfield, the resident engineer, commanded the
-companies.
-
-The strength of the sappers in the Netherlands was now 152. The
-sub-lieutenants belonging to them were James Adam and Edward Sanders.
-For several months of the year the parties detached were employed at
-Liere, Schilde, Graven Wesel, Brussels, Tournai, and Mons. Subsequently
-the fourth company, third battalion, was wholly removed to Tournai, and
-employed in the repair of the citadel, under the command of Captain W.
-D. Smith.
-
-The sixth company, second battalion, from Tarragona, with Sub-Lieutenant
-Gibb, landed at Genoa from the ‘Mercury’ transport on the 4th May; and
-on the 11th June following removed to Messina, leaving a small party at
-Genoa. Other detachments were also employed at Savona, Palermo, and
-Faro.
-
-Sixteen men of the Maltese company at Palermo were attached to Lord
-William Bentinck’s Tuscany expedition, and served at Leghorn, Pisa, and
-Lucca from February to April. In the latter month the company of Maltese
-sappers at Tarragona was increased to forty-nine men. In May, it landed
-at Genoa, and changed its quarters to Palermo in June, where both
-detachments were incorporated into a company of 110 strong. In November
-seven men of the Maltese sappers were detached to Corfu.
-
-The third company, third battalion, in Canada retained its head-quarters
-at Kingston; but throughout the campaign was much dispersed on various
-important duties to York, Point Kerry, Fort Niagara, Snake Island,
-Montreal, Ganonoque, Fort Wellington, Prescott, and Bridge Island.
-Parties are also traced at the attack and burning of Oswego under
-Lieutenant Gossett, and at the assault of Fort Erie under Lieutenant
-Phillpotts. In the latter service they received the acknowledgments of
-Lieutenant-General Drummond for their ability and exertions.
-
-A second company—fourth of the fourth battalion—embarked for service in
-Canada in April, and disembarked at Quebec from the ‘Belfield’ transport
-in June. In August the company was attached to the expedition under Sir
-George Prevost, and was present at the attack on Plattsburg, where they
-constructed sand-bag batteries, temporary bridges of felled trees, and
-planted the ladders against the walls for the storm. Subsequently to the
-assault, the company removed to Lacolle, and, after fortifying Ash
-Island, wintered at Prescott. During the campaign parties were detached
-to Montreal, Cascade-Montmorenci, Isle-aux-Noix, Turkey Point, and
-Burtonville.
-
-Captain Blanshard’s company-second of the fourth battalion—which sailed
-from Bayonne on the 27th May, was transhipped in July from the ‘Thames’
-frigate to the ‘Golden Fleece’ transport, and landed at Benedict in the
-Patuxent on the 19th August. Marching with the troops, the company of
-sixty-two strong was present in the action at Bladensburg on the 24th,
-and had three men taken prisoners, two of whom were wounded. At
-Washington the company was employed in burning the Senate-house,[215]
-President’s palace, War-Office, and other public edifices and
-establishments. Fully expecting that the British would fall, as at
-Saratoga, a prize to the republic, the President, in the extravagance of
-his anticipations, had prepared a sumptuous repast to entertain the
-chiefs of the captive British staff; but so singular are the chances of
-war, it fell to the lot of the sappers instead of the staff to do
-justice to the President’s hospitality. Afterwards the company was
-present in the action near Baltimore and at the attack of New Orleans.
-In the latter they were joined by the seventh company, first battalion,
-with Sub-Lieutenant Calder under Captain A. Emmett, who disembarked from
-the ‘Bedford’ and ‘Maria’ transports. Both companies were of great
-service during the operations and at the assault. The casualties were
-one missing and four wounded—one mortally.
-
------
-
-Footnote 215:
-
- Private Henry Scrafield behaved with spirit in overpowering two armed
- sentinels in the Senate-house, and taking them prisoners. A more
- uncompromisingly independent man perhaps never lived. Once he
- complained, in a petition to George IV., of the conduct of an officer,
- but it ended without the concession of the redress which he
- unwarrantably sought from His Majesty. In February, 1831, he
- endeavoured to save the lives of five boys who had fallen into
- Mulgrave Reservoir, at Woolwich. An orange had been thrown on the ice
- by some reckless fellow, and the unfortunate youths, scrambling after
- it, fell into the water. Scrafield was soon on the spot, and at
- imminent personal risk, crossed the broken ice on ladders, and, with
- ropes and grapnels, succeeded in rescuing the poor boys, but not till
- all life had departed. The first youth was got up in ten minutes after
- the catastrophe. For his judgment and intrepidity on the occasion he
- was promoted to be second-corporal, and the Royal Humane Society
- granted him a pecuniary reward. Pensioned in November, 1833, he
- afterwards obtained a lucrative situation on a railway, and died at
- Bletchington, of cholera, in September, 1849.
-
------
-
-A party of one colour-sergeant and six men under Captain Nicolls, from
-Halifax, Nova Scotia, was attached to the expedition under Sir John
-Sherbrooke, and served, in August and September, at the capture of Moose
-Island, Castine, and Belfast, in the State of Maine.
-
-
-
-
- 1815.
-
-Siege of Fort Boyer—Alertness of company on passage to New
- Orleans—Return of the sappers from North America—Services and
- movements of companies in Canada—Also in Nova Scotia—Captures of
- Martinique and Guadaloupe—Services and movements of companies in
- Italy—Maltese sappers disbanded—Pay of Sub-Lieutenants—Ypres—Increase
- to sappers' force in Holland; its duties and detachments; notice of
- sergeant Purcell—Renewal of the war—Strength of the corps sent to the
- Netherlands—Pontoneers—Battle of Waterloo—Disastrous situation of a
- company in retreating—General order about the alarm and the
- stragglers—Sergeant-major Hilton at Brussels—Notice of lance-corporal
- Donnelly—Exertions of another company in pressing to the
- field—Organization of the engineer establishment in France—Pontoon
- train—Magnitude of the engineer establishment; hired drivers; Flemish
- seamen—Assault of Peronne, valour of Sub-lieutenant Stratton and
- lance-corporal Councill—Pontoon bridges on the Seine—Conduct of corps
- during the campaign—Corporal Coombs with the Prussian army—Usefulness
- of the sappers in attending to the horses, &c., of the department in
- France—Domiciliary visit to Montmartre.
-
-
-In February of this year nine men were present at the siege of Fort
-Boyer, near Mobile, and their services on the occasion have been cited
-as a remarkable proof of the utility of the corps. Sir Charles Pasley
-thus writes concerning the party:—“The first night of the operations
-soldiers of the line only were employed. From a want of skill and
-experience in the nature of the duties required of them, and there being
-very few engineer officers to direct, they collected in groups, instead
-of being spread out as they ought to have been. Consequently, out of one
-small party of twenty men, fourteen were killed and wounded by a single
-discharge of grape-shot; and such confusion ensued, that very little
-progress was made in the course of that night. On the second night of
-the siege, the small party of sappers was employed in addition to the
-troops of the line. By the assistance of these few men the officers of
-engineers were enabled to regulate their working party to so much
-advantage, that before morning they had completed a parallel of 200
-yards in extent within 50 yards of the enemy’s works, besides approaches
-in advance, which, being filled with sharpshooters, the Americans were
-unable to show themselves at their guns, and the fort surrendered. It is
-proper to explain, that as the army sailed from the Mississippi in
-divisions, the main body of the royal engineer department had not
-arrived at the period of the attack. The nine men who so particularly
-distinguished themselves happened to be on the spot before the others,
-because, being all carpenters by trade, they had been lent to the
-Admiral to repair the boats of the fleet.”[216] One private was
-wounded.[217]
-
------
-
-Footnote 216:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note D, p. x.
-
-Footnote 217:
-
- ‘London Gazette.’
-
------
-
-After a detention of about six weeks from contrary winds, the eighth
-company, second battalion, with Sub-Lieutenant P. Johnston under Captain
-Harry D. Jones, cleared the channel on the 25th December and sailed for
-New Orleans. While off Madeira, the company was served out with the
-serviceable carbines and blunderbusses belonging to the transport, and
-drilled to the use of the carronades on board. These measures were
-necessary from the presence of American vessels and privateers hovering
-about the convoy. The company was consequently kept perpetually on the
-alert until it landed at Dauphine Island on the 28th February, too late
-to take part in the war.
-
-Hostilities closed in North America with the capture of Fort Boyer, and
-the three companies with the force under Major-General Lambert,
-re-embarked at Dauphine Island for England in March. The eighth company,
-second battalion, returned to the ‘Dawson’ transport, and the other two
-companies were put on board the ‘Hyperion,’ and all arrived at Woolwich
-in June following.
-
-The two companies in Canada were continually on the move fortifying the
-frontiers. The third of the third battalion maintained its head-quarters
-at Kingston; and the fourth of the fourth battalion commenced the year
-at the Holland River. It was next removed to Penetanguishine Harbour,
-where half of the company under Captain W. R. Payne, completed the
-military arrangements for establishing a naval depôt. It then proceeded
-to York; afterwards to Fort George, Sandwich, and Drummond’s Island, on
-Lake Huron. From one or other of the companies, parties were thrown out
-to Fort Niagara, Turkey Point, Amherstberg, Fort Wellington, Montreal,
-Coteau de Lac, and Lower Canada. In carrying on the various duties of
-the department, the sappers, who were employed as overseers of military
-working-parties, were found of great advantage.[218] During the year,
-eighteen men deserted from the companies, most of whom were seduced from
-their allegiance by sergeant Robert Hunter of the corps. When he headed
-the deluded party into the States, he was off Fort Grochett, River St.
-Clair, on his way from Sandwich to Machinac’, Lake Huron.
-
------
-
-Footnote 218:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note B, page vi.
-
------
-
-From the company at Halifax detachments were sent on particular duties
-to the harbour posts, but chiefly to the works at Sherbrooke’s Tower on
-Manger’s Beach.
-
-On the 2nd March, one sergeant and eight rank and file embarked at
-Barbadoes for special service under Captain A. Brown, R.E. On the 28th
-May, the party was increased to thirty-three men of all ranks, and was
-present with the force under Lieutenant-General Sir James Leith at the
-captures of Martinique on the 5th June, and Guadaloupe on the 9th
-August. In the latter attack the sappers were engaged with the artillery
-at the guns. The head-quarters of the sappers were then changed from
-Barbadoes to Guadaloupe; and the establishment of the corps in the West
-India command was reduced from two companies to one.
-
-The sixth company, second battalion, and sixty men of the Maltese
-sappers at Messina, embarked at Milazzo on the 17th May and landed at
-Naples on the 27th. On the 2nd July following they re-embarked, and
-arrived at Genoa on the 11th of that month. There the Maltese sappers
-were reinforced by the landing of the remainder of the company from
-Messina on the 18th October. The number of the whole reached 101 men,
-including the small party which rejoined the company from Corfu in
-April. Throughout the year, detachments of the sixth company, second
-battalion, were maintained at Palermo and Faro; and a party of two
-sergeants and nineteen rank and file, sent on a secret expedition, was
-afterwards on duty for a few months at Milan and Marseilles.
-
-Under a royal warrant, dated 5th October, the two companies of Maltese
-sappers stationed at Malta and Gozo, were disbanded; and the war
-company—retained for general service—was assimilated in all essential
-respects to the royal sappers and miners. The establishment of the
-company was fixed at one sub-lieutenant, five sergeants, five corporals,
-five second-corporals, three drummers, and seventy privates; and its
-strength was sustained, from time to time, by transfers of Britons,
-Maltese, Sicilians, and Italians—all properly-qualified artificers—from
-the regiments serving in the Mediterranean. The designation of the
-company—“Maltese Sappers and Miners”—assumed in 1813 for the sake of
-uniformity, was confirmed by the warrant, and the colour of the dress
-was changed from blue to red.
-
-On the representation of four sub-lieutenants, the regimental allowances
-of officers of that rank were brought under consideration. On active
-duty the pay was found to be inadequate to meet the requirements of the
-service. In the Peninsula, the officers with the army had to endure much
-hardship, and were continually menaced with pecuniary difficulties and
-embarrassments. Aware of these facts, Lieutenant-Colonel Burgoyne and
-Major Rice Jones backed the appeal by forcible recommendations to
-Lieutenant-General Mann, and on the 9th November the Prince Regent was
-pleased to increase the pay of the sub-lieutenants from 5_s._ 7_d._ to
-6_s._ 7_d._ a-day.
-
-In January the fourth company, second battalion, moved from Antwerp to
-Ypres, where they were quartered in the bishop’s palace and adjoining
-convent, which had been sacrilegiously converted by the French into an
-engineer establishment. The defences of Ypres had not been repaired
-since the fortress was taken by the French in 1794. Two considerable
-breaches were in the body of the place and the various outworks were in
-a dilapidated condition. The officers of engineers and the company were
-employed in restoring the works to a state to resist a field attack or a
-coup-de-main. This last contingency, however, was not calculated upon
-until Napoleon had regained the capital and the royal family fled to the
-frontier. The startling intelligence was announced to the resident
-engineer—Captain Oldfield—at six o’clock one evening, and by the same
-hour next morning, parties of sappers under two officers of engineers
-had opened the sluices and covered, with inundations, the two breaches
-on the Bailleul front. Immediately after, large military parties under
-the direction of the sappers and the officers of royal engineers
-commenced the work of strengthening the fortress, and further assisted
-by labourers of all ages intermixed with stout women and sturdy girls
-from the town and adjacent villages, the fortress was renewed with
-singular despatch. Sub-Lieutenant Adam, who was appointed assistant
-engineer, superintended the restoration of the body of the place near
-the Lille gate and the outworks in front of the Menin and Dixmude gates;
-he also attended to the repairs of the communication boats and bridges,
-barriers, posterns, &c. With the exception of the sappers, the garrison
-was entirely composed of foreign troops who could not speak a word of
-English, and as the sappers had only mastered a few elementary snatches
-of the Flemish language, the duty of superintendence was not
-accomplished without difficulty.
-
-To the force in Holland was added the fifth company, second battalion,
-which embarked at Woolwich on the 2nd January, and landed at Antwerp the
-same month. This company and two others already there, were employed for
-several months in improving the defences of the frontiers of the
-Netherlands, particularly at Ypres, Tournay, Mons, Menin, Dendermond,
-Ath, Namur, Charleroi, and Brussels. The various works were subdivided
-amongst the non-commissioned officers and privates, each of whom was
-held responsible for the proper execution of the work intrusted to his
-superintendence. The peasants and women under the direction of each
-counted from 20 to 100, and even more, according to circumstances.[219]
-Sergeant John Purcell had from 300 to 400 _women_ under his orders at
-Ypres; and from some winning peculiarity in his mode of command,
-obtained from their willing obedience and energies an amount of labour
-that was almost astonishing. No less than about 1,800 peasants and 2,000
-horses were engaged in these works, and, by all accounts, they were
-conducted with the greatest regularity and despatch. Sir Charles Pasley
-attributes no inconsiderable credit to the sappers for their assistance
-in the general services of the frontier;[220] and the Master-General,
-the Earl of Mulgrave, in a letter dated 4th April, expressed his “warm
-approbation of their zeal and exertions.” The Duke of Wellington also on
-visiting the frontier, awarded similar praise to the officers and
-sappers, particularly for their efficient labours at Ypres.
-
------
-
-Footnote 219:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note B, p. vi.
-
-Footnote 220:
-
- Ibid.
-
------
-
-Meanwhile Napoleon, breaking his captivity in Elba, reappeared in
-France, and wherever he journeyed, was enthusiastically welcomed by his
-former legions. As by a spell, the army gathered under the wings of his
-eagles, and again lifted him into the imperial seat from which he had
-been so recently expelled. Europe was once more thrown into commotion by
-the event, and to crush the lofty hopes and pretensions of an
-intolerable ambition, war was at once declared by the Allies against the
-usurper.
-
-At the instance of the Duke of Wellington,[221] who requested “the whole
-corps of sappers and miners” to be sent to Brussels to join his Grace’s
-force, seven companies of the corps, instructed in their art, were
-hurried off to Ostend between the 24th March and 10th June, and
-distributed with all possible haste to those frontier posts and
-fortresses in the Netherlands that most required their services. Those
-companies were the
-
- Third and sixth of the first battalion;
- Second and eighth of the second battalion;
- First and seventh of the third battalion; and
- First of the fourth battalion:
-
-and they were employed in constructing indispensable fieldworks, or
-improving the fortifications at Ostend, Ghent, Nieuport, Tournay,
-Oudenarde, Boom, Escaneffe, Antwerp, Lille, Liefkenshoek, and Hal. Not
-less than 20,000 civil labourers with very strong military parties, were
-employed on the line of works extending from Ostend to Mons, and it was
-due to the intelligent manner in which the sappers carried out the
-duties of overseers, that this important field operation was so
-efficiently executed. Hal was the depôt from which the engineer brigades
-were equipped. The three companies in the Low Countries, before the
-campaign opened, were the fourth and fifth of the second battalion, and
-the fourth of the third battalion. The total strength of the whole ten
-companies reached the following numbers:—
-
- Sub- Second
- Lieuts. Sergeants. Corporals. Corporals. Drummers. Privates. Total.
- —— —— —— —— —— —— ———
- 10 35 32 42 19 644 782[222]
-
-The Sub-Lieutenants were A. Ross, J. Sparks, W. Stratton, P. Johnston,
-W. Knapp,[223] J. Armstrong, A. Turner, C. Gratton, J. Adam, and E.
-Sanders.
-
------
-
-Footnote 221:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ viii., p. 18, edit. 1847.
-
-—
-
-Footnote 222:
-
- Corroborated, by the official State on the 18th June, 1815. See
- ‘Gurwood,’ vol. viii., App. xiii., p. 392, edit. 1847.
-
-Footnote 223:
-
- Died at Tournay, 16th June, 1815.
-
------
-
-In order that the organizations of every description with the army
-should be as complete as forethought could make them, the Duke of
-Wellington recommended the employment of two companies of seamen as
-pontoneers. No exertions were omitted to give effect to his Grace’s
-wishes, and 200 hardy man-o'-war’s men, with Captain Charles Napier,
-R.N., at their head, were speedily embarked in the ‘Euryalus’ to join
-the army as bridgemen for the campaign. Meanwhile the Duke, who was
-unaware of the extensive character of the instruction imparted to the
-sappers at Chatham, was informed, that the companies of the corps in the
-Netherlands had, for the most part, been trained in the art of
-constructing military bridges, and had acquired an expertness in all the
-details and management of floating equipments under the careful tuition
-of Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley, that promised to equal the most gigantic
-requirements of the service. His Grace, only too glad to learn this
-agreeable intelligence, revoked his original intention, countermanded
-the landing of the seamen, and thus the duty of forming the bridges for
-the passage of rivers, was wholly confined to the royal sappers and
-miners.[224]
-
------
-
-Footnote 224:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ edit. 1847, (2 & 12 May,) pp. 55, 81.
-
------
-
-At the battle of Waterloo the royal sappers and miners were not engaged.
-Three companies, however, were brought conveniently near to act in the
-event of their services being needed; and two companies with the
-pontoons, were quartered at Malines. Of the former companies, the first
-company, fourth battalion, is considered to have behaved with discredit
-in quitting the field without sufficient reason, and losing, in the
-precipitancy and confusion of the march, its baggage and field
-equipment. But the stigma seems to have been attached to the company
-without an adequate investigation of the circumstances under which the
-retreat was imperatively resorted to.
-
-The details of the affair are as follows:—On the 17th June the company
-moved from Hal by Braine-la-leud towards Waterloo, marching the whole of
-the night, and was on the position when the action commenced on the
-morning of the 18th. After a time, it was ordered to the rear by Major
-Sir George Hoste, and accordingly it marched to the furthest end of the
-village of Waterloo under Lieutenant W. Faris and Sub-Lieutenant R.
-Turner. There the company remained till between three and four o’clock
-P.M., when Lieutenant C. K. Sanders, R.E., joined it. About this time a
-brigade of Hanoverian artillery and cavalry, and several of the British
-cavalry, were retiring. The latter had vainly laboured to penetrate the
-retreating crowds, and informed Lieutenant Sanders that the French were
-at the other end of the village. In a wood on the right, discharges of
-musketry were heard, and both officers and men, who hurried away from
-the battle, corroborated the general testimony, that the enemy not only
-had possession of the wood, but in a short time would cut off the
-British from the road. Still incredulous of the alarming rumours which
-reached him, Lieutenant Sanders sought more decisive information as to
-the reported advantages of the French, and at length, satisfied with the
-additional affirmations of hundreds of officers and soldiers, who
-threatened in their flight to overrun the company, he at once ordered it
-to retire. The circumstances fairly justified this step. But the company
-had not proceeded far before it was unavoidably thrown into difficulties
-and disorder. To relieve itself from the masses was impossible. Driven
-in rear, and encompassed by overwhelming numbers of different regiments,
-it was borne along at a very rapid rate, in the vortex of the confusion.
-By the presence of cavalry and cannon, and of capsized waggons and
-baggage, its march was interrupted and its files broken. Many of the
-men, therefore, who could not keep up were dispersed among the
-fugitives; the brigade of waggons, stopped by insuperable obstructions
-on the road, was abandoned, and the company thus routed lost many of its
-knapsacks and most of its intrenching tools, baggage, and horses.[225]
-Such are the facts of this ill-understood affair, which deserve to be
-viewed more with regret than animadversion; but Colonel Carmichael
-Smyth, jealous of the honour of the corps, and feeling this apparent
-taint upon its character, was highly displeased, and refused to
-recommend the officers and men of the company for the Waterloo honours
-and advantages.[226]
-
------
-
-Footnote 225:
-
- To show how serious was the alarm, and how great the number of
- fugitives, the following extract from general orders, dated Nivelles,
- 20th June, 1815, will fully testify:—
-
- “3. The Field Marshal has observed that several soldiers, and even
- officers, have quitted their ranks without leave, and have gone to
- Bruxelles, and even some to Antwerp, where, and in the country through
- which they have passed, they have spread a false alarm, in a manner
- highly unmilitary and derogatory to the character of soldiers.
-
- “4. The Field Marshal requests the General Officers commanding
- divisions in the British army, and the General Officers commanding the
- corps of each nation of which the army is composed, to report to him
- in writing, what officers and men (the former by name) are now, or
- have been, absent without leave since the 16th instant.
-
- “5. The Field Marshal desires that the 14th article of the 14th
- section of the Articles of War may be inserted in every orderly book
- of the British army, in order to remind officers and soldiers of the
- punishment affixed by law to the crime of creating false
- alarms.”—‘Gurwood,’ viii., p.156, edit. 1847.
-
- Nearly 2000 men were returned “missing,” the greater number of whom
- were said to have gone to the rear with wounded officers and
- soldiers.—'Gurwood, viii., p.151, edit. 1847. But the probability is,
- that very few of this strength returned into the battle, but, worked
- upon by the alarm, helped to swell the force of the renegades. Under
- the circumstances, the retreat of the company of sappers is fairly
- exonerated, pressed as it was by masses of troops of all nations, who
- fled from the field in infamous haste and terror.
-
- It is right to go a step further, and show what was the effect of the
- alarm at Brussels—24 miles away from the position; and thus notice the
- conduct of one who should be recognized in these pages. Some hours
- before the company arrived at Brussels, the panic was so complete,
- that the inhabitants flew in all directions from the horrors of an
- anticipated calamity, and not a few of the soldiers quartered in the
- place swelled the rout. Sergeant-major Hilton in charge of a
- detachment of sappers, prepared for the worst by packing the plans,
- charts, &c., of the engineer department, and also the military baggage
- of the commanding royal engineer. As all his own drivers had
- disappeared, he harnessed a couple of horses in readiness to move
- should necessity force him. A Belgic servant of Colonel Carmichael
- Smyth’s, who had been in the French service, ought to have assisted,
- but showing signs of treachery, an altercation ensued, in which, to
- save himself from the cut of a sabre, the sergeant-major wounded the
- shins of the Belgian with a stroke from a crowbar. Expecting no aid
- from this faithless foreigner, the sergeant-major looked about for
- more reliable intelligence respecting the rumoured reverse at
- Waterloo. While doing so the Commandant of Brussels accosted him,
- which led to his explaining the course he intended to pursue to
- preserve the plans, &c., from falling into the hands of the enemy.
- After remarking that there was no fear of the French reaching the
- city, the Commandant desired him to order the provost, with all the
- disposable men of his guard, to wait upon him immediately at the Rue
- Royale. Sergeant Hilton promptly complied; but the provost—this
- paragon of order and discipline—could not be found; and his irresolute
- men were only too desirous of following in the wake of the winged
- crowd. At last about nine of the guard accompanied the sergeant-major
- to the Rue Royale, where the Commandant ordered him to station the men
- across the road leading to Antwerp. “Stop every waggon,” he roared,
- furious at the insane sight that everywhere met his gaze, “and run any
- one through who attempts to pass in violation of your orders!” The
- terror of the citizens was at its highest, soldiers of every country
- were pouring into the capital; all was confusion and haste; the
- streets were lined with vehicles in endless variety, and each owner
- was striving to out-ride his neighbour in the frantic chase. It
- required to be firm at such a time, and the sergeant-major, quite as
- stern as the Commandant, drew his sword, and opposing himself and his
- small guard to the onward movement of the vans, stemmed with
- difficulty the flight. Quickly the horses were withdrawn from the
- shafts, to prevent the possibility of whipping them forward; and
- turning a waggon with its broadside to the stream, the outlet was thus
- partially closed. So great now was the pressure from behind that
- waggon drove on waggon, and smashing in the roadway, the passage was
- at length blocked up with an impenetrable barricade, which effectually
- checked the efflux of the fugitives to Antwerp, and calmed the
- agitation of the people.
-
-Footnote 226:
-
- The only soldier of the corps actually in the battle was
- lance-corporal Henry Donnelly, who was orderly to Captain and
- Brigade-Major, now Major-General Oldfield, K.H. He was present on the
- 17th and 18th, and Colonel Carmichael Smyth, who was seriously
- indisposed on the night of the 17th, was much indebted to him for his
- care and attention. His claim to a medal was warmly advocated by the
- Major, who testified to his presence in the field for two days, but
- Colonel Smyth never would allow that he was entitled to it. At the
- final rejection of his just right corporal Donnelly was so much
- affected, that shortly after he went into hospital, and died on the
- 25th July, 1817.
-
- The claim of corporal Donnelly had been officially recognized at one
- time in the following order by the officer commanding his company:—
-
- “Company orders. Argenteuil, August 6, 1815. In consequence of private
- Henry Donnelly being present at the battle of Waterloo, he is entitled
- to two years advance of service. He will therefore be mustered
- according to the regulations of his Royal Highness the Prince Regent,
- dated 29th July, 1815.—(Signed) ED. COVEY, Lieutenant Royal
- Engineers.” And he was so mustered until July 1816, when Colonel Smyth
- ordered its discontinuance, making at the same time these
- remarks:—“The sapper in question rode out a horse of Major Oldfield’s
- on the 17th, and returned to Brussels on the morning of the 18th,
- without having seen an enemy or heard a shot fired. He was in Brussels
- during the actions of the 16th and 18th; and under these circumstances
- I should have been guilty of a dereliction of duty to have certified
- that he was entitled to a medal, and which he could hardly have worn
- on the parade of his company, in preference to the very good
- non-commissioned officers and men of that company, who have constantly
- done their duty much to my satisfaction and their own credit; and who
- could not but have felt aggrieved to have seen a mark of distinction
- bestowed upon private Donnelly without his having in any way deserved
- it.”
-
------
-
-Another company ordered to Waterloo on the 18th June, gained much praise
-for its firmness and regularity in pushing up to the field. This was the
-eighth company, second battalion, under Sub-Lieutenant Patrick Johnston.
-At 2 o’clock on the morning of the 18th it marched from Antwerp, and on
-arrival at Brussels Lieutenant Johnston, finding that the captain of the
-company as well as the commanding royal engineer and his staff were in
-the field, at once moved on for Waterloo. Crowds of wounded soldiers,
-anxious runaways, dismantled waggons and cannon, greatly impeded the
-march. From all he met he received the most discouraging advice, but
-amid the general panic and the numerous obstacles he had to contend
-with, he resolutely pursued his march and reached the village of
-Waterloo at 4 o’clock P.M., in a state that reflected great credit upon
-the discipline and perseverance of the company. Late in the evening,
-after firing had ceased, as there were many inducements to plundering
-and straggling, Lieutenant Johnston withdrew the company a short
-distance on the Brussels road, and placed it in an empty barn till next
-morning, when it commenced its march for Paris. In applauding the
-company for its steadiness and order under trying circumstances, Colonel
-C. Smyth alluded in a particular manner to the meritorious conduct of
-Lieutenant Johnston. Neither the officer nor his men were considered
-entitled to the Waterloo medal and extra service; and for several years
-afterwards many of the company claimed these advantages with
-unprecedented pertinacity, but without effect.
-
-“The experience of former defects in the Peninsula,” wrote
-Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley, “led to the more perfect organization of the
-field establishment of the royal engineer department.” On the 20th June
-orders to effect the arrangement were issued by Colonel C. Smyth. “
-Every division of the army had one engineer’s brigade attached to it;
-each brigade consisting of a complete company of well-trained sappers
-and miners, with drivers, horses and waggons carrying entrenching tools
-sufficient to employ a working party of 500 men, besides a proportion of
-artificers' tools, and other engineer stores.”[227] The number of
-companies so distributed was six. “A captain and a certain number of
-subaltern officers were attached to each brigade, and were responsible
-for the discipline of the men and efficiency of the horses,” &c.[228]
-
------
-
-Footnote 227:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note F, p. xii.
-
-Footnote 228:
-
- Ibid.
-
------
-
-Four companies were attached to the pontoon train, “which,” according to
-the same authority, “consisted of eighty pontoons, besides
-store-waggons, &c., and was drawn by nearly 800 horses, the whole being
-under the command of Brevet-Major Tylden of the engineers, assisted by a
-due proportion of captains and subalterns of the same corps.”[229] The
-second company, fourth battalion, under Sub-Lieutenant Samuel M‘Lean, of
-sixty-seven total, having joined the army from England soon after the
-disposition, was also added to the pontoon train.
-
------
-
-Footnote 229:
-
- Ibid.
-
------
-
-The total of the engineer establishment with the army and in the
-Netherlands, under the command of about sixty officers of engineers,
-amounted to 10 sub-lieutenants and 838 soldiers of the royal sappers and
-miners, and, adds Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley, “550 drivers in charge of
-160 waggons, pontoon carriages included, and more than 1,000 horses.”
-Besides medical officers and other non-combatants, and a large force of
-peasants employed on the works, “a small number of Flemish seamen,
-accustomed to rivers and coasting navigation, was attached to each
-division of the pontoon train.”[230] The hired drivers, paid at 1_s._
-6_d._ a-day each and rations, were provided with a uniform of grey
-clothing, having red cuffs and collars to their round jackets; and the
-Flemish seamen, receiving each an allowance of 2_s._ a-day and rations,
-were dressed like British sailors, having on the front of their low
-glazed caps, painted in white, the word “Pontoneer.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 230:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note F, p. xii.
-
------
-
-All the companies of the corps moved with the army towards Paris,
-leaving a few small detachments dispersed in Flanders. The second
-company, second battalion, attached to the first division, was present
-at the capture of Peronne on the 26th June under Sub-Lieutenant W.
-Stratton and two captains of engineers. The ladders used on the occasion
-were collected in the neighbourhood, but being too short were lashed
-together. The company had the honour of leading the brigade of guards to
-the assault,[231] and behaved remarkably well.[232] Preceding the
-column, they threw a number of fascines and faggots, hastily prepared by
-them, into the ditch of the hornwork, and thus enabled the troops to
-pass its swampy bottom into the body of the place.[233] A party of the
-company advanced under a heavy fire to force the main entrance. No
-ladders were carried with it, nor any sledge-hammers or instruments by
-which to force it open. Daring men were in the batch, and their first
-impulse, forlorn as it was, urged them to mount the gate. Lieutenant
-Stratton and lance-corporal Edward Councill soon gained the top, and
-tearing themselves over the spikes which crowned it, jumped into the
-place, tore down the fastenings, and pulling the gate open, admitted the
-troops. In leading the stormers into the work, Captain Alexander
-Thompson, R.E., and Lieutenant Stratton were severely wounded, as also
-two men of the company. Corporal Councill was dangerously wounded in the
-breast.
-
------
-
-Footnote 231:
-
- Ibid, i., note D, p. ix.
-
-Footnote 232:
-
- ‘Wellington Dispatches,’ viii., p. 176, edit. 1847.
-
-Footnote 233:
-
- Colonel Carmichael Smyth’s ‘Plans of attack upon Antwerp,’ &c., p. 9,
- and plan.
-
------
-
-For the passage of the army to Paris, a pontoon bridge was thrown over
-the Seine at Argenteuil early in July. Twenty pontoons were employed in
-its formation, and also some trestles, which were placed next to the
-banks of the river. On its completion, the Duke of Wellington, who was
-present during the greater part of the operation, first passed over
-leading his horse, and then the whole army with its artillery and
-baggage.
-
-From the acute winding of the Seine it was again necessary to pass the
-troops over the river, and a pontoon bridge similar to the one laid at
-Argenteuil was thrown at Aniers. The fifth company, second battalion,
-and seventh company, third battalion, constructed these bridges. Some
-Flemish seamen assisted in their formation, confining their exertions
-chiefly to mooring the pontoons. Skilful as they were as sailors, their
-want of previous training as pontoneers, rendered them far less
-serviceable than the royal sappers and miners.[234] The bridges were
-maintained for some months on the Seine, facilities being afforded for
-continuing the navigation without interruption. For this purpose an
-opening was made in the centre of each bridge, and when required to be
-re-established for the passage of the troops, the floating rafts were
-lashed in their places and removed again when the occasion was served. A
-sufficient detachment under Sub-Lieutenant James Adam was posted for a
-season at Chatou, to attend to a similar duty at the bridge thrown there
-by the Russians. Three companies with forty pontoons were also stationed
-at Epinay.
-
------
-
-Footnote 234:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note F, p. xii.
-
------
-
-After the capture of Paris, the Earl of Mulgrave, then Master-General of
-the Ordnance, in a letter dated 11th July, expressed his high
-appreciation of the zealous, able, and beneficial exertions of the
-officers and soldiers of the corps during the successful progress of the
-campaign; and also of the services of the officers and men at the
-different fortresses.
-
-Corporal Joseph Coombs, of the fourth company, second battalion,
-detached to Maubeuge on the 23rd July, under Captain Harding, royal
-engineers, was present at the sieges of Philipville, from the 7th to
-18th August, and Rocroy on the 15th and 16th following. He was with the
-army commanded by Prince Augustus of Prussia, and was the only British
-sapper engaged. On leaving that army in October, Captain Harding said
-that the corporal had conducted himself extremely well, and was both
-intelligent and active in the different services in which he had been
-employed.
-
-During the year a number of hired drivers deserted. They were generally
-ignorant of their duties and many of them of bad character. To take care
-of the horses was the principal object of the chief engineer and his
-officers. Obtaining an equal number of foreign drivers to replace the
-vacancies occasioned by desertion, afforded no promise of advantage or
-improvement. It was, therefore, determined, to make an experiment by
-appointing the royal sappers and miners to the duty. Accordingly, the
-number of men required was attached to the horses, and “from their
-peculiar habits of zeal and exertion, they made no difficulty of
-reconciling themselves to the novel occupation of grooms and drivers.”
-The experiment was eminently successful. “The horses were kept efficient
-and in proper condition;” and, “but for this measure, a number of
-valuable horses must have been ruined, and the pontoon train, as well as
-the engineers' brigades, by degrees, have become totally
-unserviceable.”[235]
-
------
-
-Footnote 235:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Elementary Fortification,’ i., note F, p. xii.
-
------
-
-At Paris the sappers were called upon to perform a domiciliary visit to
-the capital, which probably is the only instance on record of British
-soldiers being so employed in an enemy’s country. The Duke of Wellington
-having been informed that arms were carried nightly into Paris from
-Montmartre, desired Sir Thomas Brisbane, commanding the seventh division
-of the army, to order Captain Harry Jones, R.E., to take the company of
-sappers attached to the division, with such tools as might be necessary,
-and examine rigidly every part of Montmartre where it was probable arms
-might be concealed. The officer commanding the troops stationed within
-the intrenchments, had orders not to allow any person to pass out, until
-Captain Jones had completed his examination. The sappers were employed
-nearly the whole day in making the search. Every cellar, house, and
-garden was examined; no place where it was possible to conceal arms was
-unexplored, but the result was unsuccessful. No doubt, however, existed,
-that the information communicated to the Duke of Wellington was well
-founded.
-
-
-
-
- 1816-1818.
-
-Movements in France—Return of six companies from thence to
- England—Strength of those remaining, and detachments from them—St.
- Helena—Return of company from Italy—Disbandment of the war company of
- Maltese sappers—Battle of Algiers—Conduct of corps at
- Valenciennes—Instances in which the want of arms was felt during the
- war—Arming the corps attributable to accidental circumstances—Training
- and instruction of the corps in France—Its misconduct—But
- remarkable efficiency at drill—Municipal thanks to companies
- at Valenciennes—Dress—Bugles adopted—Reduction in the
- corps—Sub-Lieutenants disbanded—Withdrawal of companies from certain
- stations—Relief of company at Barbadoes—Repairing damages at St.
- Lucia; conduct of the old West India company—Corfu—Inspection of corps
- in France—Epaulettes introduced—Sordid conduct of four men in refusing
- to wear them—Murder of private Milne, and consequent punishment of
- corps in France by the Duke of Wellington—Return of the sappers from
- France.
-
-
-After the capitulation of Paris, the royal sappers and miners were
-encamped in the vicinity of the city. Late in the year they were removed
-to other stations on the northern frontiers of France; and until the
-formation of the army of occupation, were constantly changing their
-quarters and furnishing detachments for particular services at different
-places.
-
-To meet the arrangements for reducing the army in France, six companies
-quitted the country for England in January. Four embarked at Boulogne
-and two at Calais. The former arrived at Woolwich on the 9th February
-and the latter on the following day.
-
-Five companies remained with the army of occupation and were attached to
-divisions as follows:—
-
- 1st division 8th com., 2nd batt. Sub-Lieut. P. Johnston.
- 2nd division 1st com., 3rd batt. Sub-Lieut. W. Stevens.
- 3rd division 4th com., 2nd batt. Sub-Lieut. J. Adam.
- Pontoon train { 2nd com., 4th batt. Sub-Lieut. S. M‘Lean,
- { 5th com., 2nd batt. Sub-Lieut. C. Gratton.
-
-Their united strength counted 435 of all ranks, and they were quartered
-at Valenciennes, Raismes, Cantain, Bellain, St. Amand, Pernes, Denain,
-and Houdain. These places were the chief stations of the corps until its
-removal from France in 1818. Parties were also detached to Cambrai, St.
-Pol, and other places. Raismes was the head-quarters of the pontoon
-train. Each company attached to the train had twenty pontoons with
-stores and waggons in charge. The second company, fourth battalion, was
-attached to the right bridge of the train, and the fifth company, second
-battalion, to the left. The former bridge was permanently stationed at
-Raismes, but the latter was repeatedly moved from village to village for
-service and instruction, making its chief halts at Raismes and Aubry.
-
-On the 26th January the seventh company, fourth battalion, of
-forty-eight total under Sub-Lieutenant A. Wallace followed Napoleon to
-St. Helena, and landed from the ‘Phaeton’ frigate on the 13th April.
-Major Emmett, R.E. took command of the company on its arrival. In
-carrying on the duties of the island the men were much detached and
-separated. Many acted as overseers of the Chinese and line workmen, and
-were found very useful in their several occupations. The headquarters
-were at St. James', and parties at different periods were employed at
-Prosperous Bay, Turk’s Cap, Sandy Bay, Great Pound Ridge, Horse Pasture
-Point, Lemon Valley, Rupert’s Hill, Rupert’s Valley, Ladder Hill, &c.
-Besides attending to the repairs of the barracks and public buildings
-and strengthening the sea-defences, the company rendered efficient
-assistance in the building of a residence for Napoleon at Longwood. The
-structure was of one story only and contained about forty rooms. It was,
-however, never occupied, as the ex-emperor expired before the furniture
-had been arranged in the several apartments.
-
-On the evacuation of Italy the sixth company, second battalion, under
-Sub-Lieutenant R. Gibb, sailed from Genoa and landed at Gibraltar on the
-17th March. Two months after, a fourth company was added to the engineer
-force on the Rock, by the arrival, in the ‘Kennesby Castle’ transport,
-of the first company, fourth battalion, from Portsmouth.
-
-The Maltese company of sappers quitted Genoa with the British troops and
-landed at Malta in March. It continued to maintain its military
-organization and character until the 31st March, 1817, when, by the
-Prince Regent’s command, it was disbanded. This was the _last_ company
-of the Maltese sappers and miners.
-
-On the 27th August the seventh company, first battalion under Captain
-William Reid and Major William Gosset, R.E., “had the high honour,” says
-Sir John Jones, “of participating with the fleet,” under Lord Exmouth,
-“in a splendid naval triumph.” This was the battle of Algiers. “Under
-the idea,” adds Sir John, “that it might become necessary to land and
-destroy some of the batteries and works covering the harbour of Algiers,
-the company,” eighty-four strong, “was embarked with the fleet; but
-owing to the daring intrepidity and able nautical manœuvres of Lord
-Exmouth, their services as miners were rendered unnecessary.”[236]
-Throughout the action, therefore, they fought with the seamen at the
-guns of the ‘Queen Charlotte’ and the ‘Impregnable,’ and gained equal
-credit with the navy and marines for their “noble support.”[237]
-Sub-Lieutenant S. Calder and fifteen rank and file were wounded, of whom
-private David Campbell mortally. The company returned to England in the
-‘Queen Charlotte’ and the ‘Glasgow’ frigate in October, and as a reward
-for their services each soldier received a gratuity of two months' pay.
-
------
-
-Footnote 236:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii., p. 891, 2nd edit.
-
-Footnote 237:
-
- ‘London Gazette.’
-
------
-
-Comparatively unnoticed, from the nature of their duties, it was seldom
-that the sappers and miners were referred to in the despatches of
-general officers; but the rule seems to have been infringed by
-Lieut.-General Sir Charles Colville, who on quitting his command at
-Valenciennes early in 1817, offered the following tribute to their
-merits:—
-
- London, 19th April, 1817.
-
- MY DEAR SIR CHARLES,
-
- I am unwilling to part with those whom I regard so much, without
- bidding them adieu, and therefore request you will accept yourself,
- and have the goodness to express to the other officers of the royal
- engineers of the Valenciennes' staff and pontoon train, as well as
- those who were attached to the late third division, my sincere good
- wishes for their continued honour and welfare, and that you and they
- and the officers and privates of the royal sappers and miners will
- accept my thanks for the promptitude and correctness with which my
- wishes were met by them, during the time I had the honour to have them
- under my command.
-
- I am, &c.,
- (Signed) CHARLES COLVILLE.
-
- Lieut.-Colonel Sir C. F. Smith, R.E.
-
-Arming the corps efficiently had for years been a subject of
-discussion and representation. Lord Mulgrave, the Master-General,
-however, could not be persuaded of the necessity of the measure, and
-under the opinion that a working corps ought not to be armed, sent
-detachments to the Peninsula equipped only with swords. The evil of
-this was greatly felt, as the sappers could not march across the
-country without being guarded by other troops. For the same reason
-the company attached to the light division, which was required for
-the siege of Bayonne, was unable to join. Upwards of 400 sappers
-were employed in that siege, and might, had they been equipped with
-fire-arms, have rendered important assistance in repelling the
-disastrous sortie.
-
-Eleven companies were sent to the Netherlands in a similarly
-defenceless state. Before moving them, Earl Mulgrave was ready to
-abide by the views of the Duke of Wellington on the point, as his
-Grace promised to consider the question when the first company
-should arrive; but no farther notice appears to have been taken of
-the subject, and the whole eleven companies landed without a
-firelock.
-
-When the alarming and unfounded reports of the retreat of the
-British from Waterloo reached Malines, Major Tylden, with the
-pontoon companies under his command, assumed a posture of defence;
-but the attitude, from want of arms, was necessarily impotent and
-embarrassing. This gave the Major a notion, when afterwards crossing
-the plains of Waterloo, of arming the companies with muskets and
-accoutrements scattered on the battle-field; the idea, however, from
-some regimental considerations was not carried out.
-
-On one occasion, near St. Denis, all the sappers of the army, nearly
-1,000 strong, were assembled to witness an execution, and strange to
-add, in that imposing force there was not a single fire-arm! At
-another time there was an inspection of the pontoon train of eighty
-pontoons and other carriages, with horses, drivers, and pontoneers,
-occupying a line of road nearly two miles in length. The sappers
-were present in their whole strength, but without a musket in their
-ranks to show the quality of protection they could afford to the
-immense charge intrusted to them. Fifty men with fire-arms could
-easily have destroyed the whole force in ten minutes. These
-instances and others equally striking, occurring in an enemy’s
-country, were strongly brought under the notice of the higher
-powers; but, where representations and remonstrances founded on the
-necessities of the service failed to obtain attention, accidental
-circumstances at last gained the desired object. At the great
-reviews in France, the bridges required for the passage of the army
-were thrown the evening previously, and the sappers consequently
-were free for any other duty. Usually they were employed to
-represent the enemy, and to show the line of the enemy’s position to
-advantage it was considered best to effect it by musketry fire.
-Orders were therefore given, on the 8th October, to supply the
-companies with muskets and bayonets from the stores at Valenciennes;
-and from this trivial incident may be dated the period from which
-the corps was properly and uniformly armed.
-
-To keep up the training and efficiency of the corps in France, Sir
-James Carmichael Smyth issued to each non-commissioned officer and
-fifty of the most steady and intelligent privates, books and useful
-articles for their instruction and improvement. Schools were also
-established for the men, and prizes liberally awarded for
-industrious application and advancement. To perfect the corps in the
-use of the firelock and marching evolutions, five serjeants from the
-light infantry regiments in France were specially appointed to the
-duty. Each company was also required to execute a certain portion of
-field-work every year and reports of individual progress in
-instruction were prepared weekly, which were carefully examined, and
-promotion distributed according to merit. The pontoon train, which
-was constantly in motion and sustained a high character for activity
-and usefulness, was only expected to do half the work demanded from
-the divisional companies; and this course of professional and
-general education, based upon the system of Lieutenant-Colonel
-Pasley, was scrupulously enforced until the companies quitted France
-in November, 1818.
-
-Notwithstanding all this attention on the part of the officers,
-there was much misconduct prevalent in the sappers. During the
-period that eleven companies were with the army, courts' martial
-were very uncommon, and the punishments infinitely fewer than were
-found necessary to keep only five companies in order. This suggests
-a difficulty not easily explained; for, when the six companies were
-removed from the country in 1816, the weeds from the other five were
-sent to England, and their places supplied by privates of
-unexceptionable character.
-
-So rigid indeed had the drilling been enforced that at the last
-reviews in the vicinity of Valenciennes, the correct manner in which
-the royal sappers and miners were handled by Captain Harry D. Jones,
-when representing the enemy, excited general approbation. Their
-light infantry evolutions even emulated those of their old
-companions in arms of the light division, whose only business was
-that of constant exercise in the requirements of the parade and in
-martial movements and combinations. The formation of “rallying
-square” by the companies was particularly commended; and those who
-did not justly appreciate their military attainments from the
-semi-civil nature of their many employments—expected to see them
-fly, as the cavalry, in its impetuous charges over the plain,
-furiously approached their compact and immoveable phalanx.
-
-While these disciplinary exercises were in operation, it happened
-that the fourth company second battalion at Valenciennes, was
-suddenly called upon to extinguish a fire in the town. So well
-applied were their efforts in this humane service that the flames
-were speedily suppressed amid the thankful shouts of the people.
-This seemingly was not enough to mark their gratitude, and therefore
-the mayor and corporation in full municipal costume bearing the
-symbols of their offices, waited upon Captain Harry Jones to express
-the deep acknowledgments of the inhabitants “to the officers and men
-of the corps for their conduct on the occasion.” In his orders of
-the 2nd November, Captain Jones added, “The activity displayed by
-the non-commissioned officers and privates as well as the
-cheerfulness with which they executed all orders reflects the
-highest credit upon them. The bold conduct of private Thomas James
-deserves to be particularly mentioned,” and he was appointed a lance
-corporal.
-
-Early in the year the high-fronted chaco was superseded by a black
-felt cap of more military pretensions than was formerly worn. It was
-embellished with yellow cords and tassels, which fell with chivalric
-gaiety upon the left shoulder. The sergeants and staff sergeants
-wore white heckle feathers, gold bands and cords, with gilt scales
-and ornaments.-See Plate XII. 1823.
-
-In March the drums throughout the corps were abolished and bugles
-adopted. The rank of drummer was also changed to accord with the
-alteration, and drum-major James Bailey, the first of the rank, was
-now styled bugle-major.
-
-The return of peace gave rise to a gradual reduction in the corps.
-On the 16th August, 1816, twenty-five men per company were lopped
-off. This took away 800 men, reducing the corps from 2,861 to 2,061
-of all ranks. By the royal warrant of the 4th February, 1817, an
-entire battalion was disbanded, and a further diminution of ten
-privates and one drummer took place in each of the remaining
-twenty-four companies. From the staff was taken one adjutant, one
-sergeant-major, and one quartermaster-sergeant, and also the whole
-of the sub-lieutenants, thirty-two in number.[238] The establishment
-of the corps was thus decreased to twenty-four companies of 1,258 of
-all ranks.[239]
-
------
-
-Footnote 238:
-
- Generally the sub-lieutenants were commissioned into the corps
- from the ranks of other regiments, as a patronage to the military
- friends of the Master-General. Many of them had distinguished
- themselves in the field, were good drills, and fine-looking
- soldiers; but though considered at first to promise well, they
- disappointed the expectations formed of their probable usefulness.
- Wanting the necessary ability and weight, they were neither
- respected in the army nor by the corps; and unable, therefore, to
- give the satisfaction which was reasonably hoped for, the first
- reduction ordered after the peace, embraced the abolition of the
- rank.—Pasley’s Mil. Pol., pp. 18, 19, Introduction. Their removal
- from the corps was, nevertheless, alluded to in terms of “extreme
- regret” by Colonel Carmichael Smyth in his orders of the 22nd
- April. In concluding his address at parting, he thus wrote, “With
- the conduct of the whole of the sub-lieutenants Colonel Carmichael
- Smyth has had every reason to be satisfied, but more particularly
- with those who, having been longest under his command, he has had
- more occasion of knowing. If, in the course of future service, he
- should have any opportunity of being useful to them, he assures
- them he will embrace it with pleasure.”
-
-Footnote 239:
-
- In addition to this total 180 men of the companies in France were
- borne on the strength as supernumeraries, until December, 1818.
-
------
-
-In consequence of these orders, the companies at Dover and Spike
-Island were withdrawn, as also the detachment at Guernsey. The force
-at Gibraltar was reduced from four to three companies, and the
-strength at Woolwich and Chatham was brought down to a fluctuating
-establishment of five companies.
-
-The company discontinued on the works at Spike Island, sailed for
-Barbadoes on the 17th December, 1817, on board the ‘Thames of
-London’ freight-ship, to relieve the old company which landed there
-in January, 1794. The vessel encountered some very stormy weather on
-the voyage, from the effects of which Lieutenant Rogers, R.E., who
-commanded the company, died when near Madeira, and the charge of the
-men devolved upon Captain Robert Duport of the royal artillery. Not
-a single irregularity was committed by the sappers during the
-voyage, and on their arrival in Carlisle Bay on the 18th January,
-Lord Combermere, the governor, expressed in orders his high
-satisfaction of their excellent conduct as reported to him by
-Captain Duport.
-
-On the landing of the new company, the old West India hands,
-dwindled to twenty-eight in number including sergeants, were sent to
-St. Lucia, and assisted in repairing the damage done by a recent
-hurricane. In March following, they arrived in England and were
-disbanded. In summing up their character, Colonel William Johnston,
-of the engineers, thus wrote, “They are a drunken set, and require
-to be thought of and provided for like babies;” but, nevertheless,
-he urged that the sapper force in Barbadoes should be always
-maintained complete, as it would act as a check upon the
-contractors, and enable the estimates to be carried into execution
-with more despatch, economy, and superiority of workmanship in
-almost all the details, than if an equal number of artificers were
-derived from the country.
-
-A company of fifty strong, intended for the service of the palace of
-the Lord High Commissioner at Corfu, embarked at Portsmouth on the
-4th May, and after a month’s detention at Malta reached its
-destination in August. The employment of the company was chiefly
-confined to clearing away the rock, by blasting, for the foundations
-of the palace, and in executing such other miscellaneous services as
-were required. From local disagreements regarding the working pay of
-the company, the men were precluded from taking part in the artistic
-details of the palace, and eventually, from the same cause, it was
-removed from the island.
-
-Colonel Carmichael Smyth made his last general inspection of the
-corps in France in May, and in complimenting the companies for the
-excellency of their discipline, interior economy, and improvement in
-the field duties, awarded to fifteen non-commissioned officers and
-men—the most advanced in the course of instruction—a silver
-penholder each as a token of his approbation.
-
-This year, the companies in France substituted yellow worsted
-epaulettes for the plain shoulder-strap, the expense of which was
-borne by the men themselves. Among the companies there were four
-unepauletted privates who at all times fell in, like branded
-castaways, in the rear of their company. The badges had been placed
-on their shoulders, but, more mean than avaricious, they refused to
-pay for them. Feeling none of that becoming pride which has always
-been so largely developed among even the commonest soldiers, they
-were publicly stripped of the epaulettes intended to give them
-distinction, not allowed to disfigure the ranks with their presence,
-and ultimately removed in contempt to England. The circumstances of
-this curious proceeding are given in the following spirited order of
-Colonel Carmichael Smyth.
-
- “C. E. O. Head Quarters, Cambray, 30th May, 1818.
-
- “The commanding engineer has received a report that four men of
- Captain Stanway’s company, viz., privates—
-
- Patrick O’Kean,
- Andrew Graham,
- James Ballingall,
- James Scoble,
-
- have refused to sign their accounts, alleging that they have no
- right to pay for the additional fringe for their epaulettes, as
- sanctioned by the commanding engineer’s orders of 4th April, 1818.
-
- “Colonel Carmichael Smyth had not an idea that, in the whole of
- the five companies in this country under his command, four men of
- so sordid and mean a disposition would have been found. He holds
- them up to the contempt of their comrades, as void of every
- feeling that ought to actuate a soldier with pleasure or pride in
- the character or appearance of the company to which they belong.
-
- “He directs that the epaulettes may be forthwith cut off their
- shoulders, and that they are in future to parade upon all
- occasions in the rear of the company until an opportunity offers
- to send them away from it altogether. They will be removed to
- either the Gibraltar or West India company, being perfectly
- unworthy of serving with this army.
-
- “Colonel Carmichael Smyth feels confident that the
- non-commissioned officers and men of the sapper companies with
- this army must be sensible of their improved state of discipline,
- regularity, and appearance, and how much in consequence, their own
- individual happiness and respectability are increased. The
- character, conduct, and appearance of a corps, reflects good or
- evil upon every soldier belonging to it as the case may be.
-
- “The sapper companies have fortunately established a respectable
- character, and are well thought of in this army. The epaulettes
- have been adopted as distinguishing them from the infantry. The
- sapper’s duty requires much more intelligence, and much more
- previous training, than that of a common infantry soldier. He is
- better paid and better clothed, and ought to conceive himself
- happy at being permitted to wear a distinction showing that he is
- a sapper. Such, no doubt, will be the view taken of the subject by
- every non-commissioned officer and sapper who feels any way
- interested in the welfare and respectability of the corps.
-
- “The sooner men who have not this feeling are got rid of the
- better. They are unworthy of belonging to this army.
-
- (Signed) “JOHN OLDFIELD.
- “Major of Brigade.”
-
-On the 19th June, private Alexander Milne of the corps was found in
-a wheat-field, near Raismes, murdered! A number of the men of his
-company had been in the habit of breaking out of their quarters
-after tattoo roll-call, and spending the time of their absence in
-gambling. Some were said to have been playing with the deceased on
-the night of the murder. Strong suspicion attached to the
-card-party, but as the perpetrator of the deed could not be
-discovered, the Duke of Wellington, convinced that the murderer was
-in the ranks of the corps, ordered _all_ the sappers and miners with
-the army, both near and distant, to parade every hour of every day
-from four in the morning till ten in the evening, as a punishment
-for the crime; and as the order was never rescinded, it was
-enforced—with only a slight relief—until the very hour the companies
-quitted France.[240] Several of the officers and many of the men
-were worn out and laid up with fevers by the rigour of the penalty,
-and its execution fell with singular hardship upon one of the
-companies which, quartered with the division encamped near St. Omer,
-was, at the time, seventy miles away from the place of the murder!
-
------
-
-Footnote 240:
-
- The orders issued for the infliction of this discipline were as
- follows:—
-
- “Head Quarters, Cambray, 25th June, 1818. In consequence of the
- circumstances connected with the murder of Alexander Milne, of
- Captain Peake’s company, which have appeared upon the proceedings
- of a court of enquiry, the Field Marshal has directed that the
- rolls of the royal sappers and miners may be called, until further
- orders, in their several cantonments every hour from 4 in the
- morning until 10 at night, all the officers being present; and
- that a daily report thereof may be made to head-quarters.”
-
- “Head-Quarters, Cambray, 18th July, 1818. In consequence of orders
- from His Grace the Commander of the Forces, the rolls of the
- several companies of royal sappers and miners will be called every
- two hours from 4 in the morning until 10 at night, in place of
- every hour as directed in the C. E. orders of the 25th ultimo.”
-
------
-
-Early in November, on the breaking up of the army of occupation, the
-eighth company, second battalion, took charge of the pontoons and
-stores to Antwerp, and the other four companies marched from Cambrai
-to Calais, where, as arranged by General Power with the French
-governor, they were encamped on the glacis on the east side of the
-town. This was requisite, as by the treaty of the 3rd November,
-1815, no troops of the army of occupation could be quartered within
-any of the fortresses not specified in the treaty. At Calais the
-companies remained about a week, assisting in the embarkation of the
-army and the shipment of the cavalry horses. In this service the
-sappers became so expert, that a regiment was embarked and many were
-landed at Dover during the same tide. All the companies arrived in
-England before the end of November. One sergeant and twenty men,
-under Lieutenant Hayter, of the engineers, after the sailing of the
-troops, guarded the military chest both at Calais and on the
-passage, and rejoined their companies, when the important duty for
-which they were selected was completed.
-
-
-
-
- 1819-1824.
-
-Reduction in the corps—Distribution—Sergeant Thomas Brown, the
- modeller—Reinforcement to the Cape, and services of the detachment
- during the Kaffir war—Epidemic at Bermuda—Damages at Antigua
- occasioned by a hurricane—Visit to Chatham of the Duke of
- Clarence—Withdrawal of a detachment from Corfu—A private becomes a
- peer—Draft to Bermuda—Second visit to Chatham of the Duke of
- Clarence—Fever at Barbadoes—Death of Napoleon, and withdrawal of
- company from St. Helena—Notice of private John Bennett—Movements
- of the company in Canada—Trigonometrical operations under the
- Board of Longitude—Feversham—Relief of the old Gibraltar
- company—Breastplates—St. Nicholas' Island—Condition of company at
- Barbadoes when inspected by the Engineer Commission—Scattered
- state of the detachment at the Cape—Services of the detachment at
- Corfu—Intelligence and usefulness of sergeant Hall and corporal
- Lawson—Special services of corporal John Smith—Pontoon
- trials—Sheerness—Notice of corporal Shorter—Forage-caps and
- swords.
-
-
-By the royal warrant of 20th March, 1819, the peace establishment of
-the corps was further reduced, from twenty-four companies of 1,258
-total, to twelve companies of 752. Of this number the staff embraced
-one brigade-major, one adjutant, one quartermaster, two
-sergeant-majors, two quartermaster-sergeants, and one bugle-major.
-The organization of each company was fixed at the subjoined detail:—
-
- 1 colour-sergeant,
- 2 sergeants,
- 3 corporals,
- 3 second-corporals,
- 2 buglers,
- 51 privates.
- ——
- Total 62;
-
-and the whole were distributed, with regard to strength,
-consistently with the relative wants of the several stations. These
-stations were Woolwich, Chatham, Portsmouth, and Plymouth;
-Gibraltar, Corfu, Bermuda, Barbadoes, St. Helena, Kingston in Upper
-Canada, and the Cape of Good Hope.[241]
-
------
-
-Footnote 241:
-
- The companies at Newfoundland and at Halifax, Nova Scotia,
- returned to England late in 1819. To the former company belonged
- sergeant Thomas Brown, who was discharged from the corps in
- November, 1819, after a service of twelve years. In 1821 the late
- Sir William Congreve appointed him modeller at the royal military
- repository, Woolwich, which situation he has held for thirty-six
- years with great credit. In that period he has made 125 models,
- chiefly of field artillery, pontoons, bridges, and miscellaneous
- military subjects. The greatest number are deposited for
- exhibition in the Rotunda, and the remainder in the rooms of
- instruction for the officers and non-commissioned officers. Many
- others also, which were defective or out of repair he has renewed
- or remade. His principal works, considered with regard to the
- skill and artistic excellence displayed in their construction, are
- the model of a fortified half octagon, showing the approaches and
- plan of attack, on a scale of 22½ feet to an inch, and a model of
- St. James’s Park as it was at the celebration of the peace in
- 1814.
-
------
-
-A reinforcement of thirty men, under Lieutenant Rutherford, R.E.,
-arrived at the Cape of Good Hope on the 24th July. In consequence of
-hostilities with the Kaffirs the detachment marched 700 miles to the
-south-eastern frontier. It traversed a wild and thickly-wooded
-country, where there were neither bridges nor roads; and in the
-absence of soldiers of the quartermaster-general’s department,
-facilitated by their exertions the progress of the troops. In places
-where civil artificers could not be procured at any rate of wages,
-they executed various services and works of defence for the security
-and tranquillity of the settlement. On one occasion they constructed
-a temporary bridge, of chance materials, to span one of the
-principal rivers of the country, which was swollen by floods, and
-rendered deep, rapid, and dangerous. The bridge was thrown in six
-hours, and the whole of the force, about 2,000 horse and foot, a
-demi-battery of guns with ammunition waggons, about 100 baggage
-waggons with commissariat supplies, camp equipage, &c., crossed in
-perfect safety in three hours. “Without the assistance of these
-sappers,” writes Colonel Holloway, R.E., “the river could not have
-been passed without much delay, loss of property, and perhaps loss
-of life;” and, “both on the frontier, and at the seat of government,
-they were always found of the utmost benefit.” The detachment
-returned to Cape Town in December, when the remnant of the old
-party, which had been in the colony since 1806, quitted for England
-and arrived at Woolwich on the 5th September, 1820.
-
-An epidemic fever of a severe character raged at Bermuda during the
-months of August and September, and out of a company of fifty-two
-total, no less than one sergeant, twenty rank and file, three women,
-and one child, fell victims to its virulence. Captain Cavalie S.
-Mercer who commanded the company, was also numbered with the dead.
-
-From Barbadoes, thirty non-commissioned officers and men, under the
-command of Captain W. D. Smith, were detached to Antigua, in
-November, and worked in the engineer department, repairing the
-damage caused by a recent hurricane, until the January following,
-when they returned to their former station. Small parties, of
-fluctuating strength, were also detached to Trinidad, St. Lucia,
-Tobago, and Demerara, and had charge of different working parties at
-those islands for several years.
-
-At Chatham on the 11th November, the Duke of Clarence reviewed the
-corps under arms; and after witnessing various field operations,
-including the firing of mines, the construction of flying saps, and
-the manœuvring of pontoons, inspected the model and school rooms.
-In the latter, he watched with great interest the system of
-instruction as carried out by Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley; and in
-expressing his perfect satisfaction with all he saw, added his
-opinion, that the establishment was one of great public utility.
-
-On the 14th of the same month, thirty-four non-commissioned officers
-and men of the company at Corfu were withdrawn from the island in
-the ‘Christiana’ transport, and sailed for England. On arriving at
-Gibraltar, one sergeant and nineteen rank and file joined the
-companies there under an order from General Sir George Don; and the
-remaining twelve reached Chatham on the 2nd April, 1820. The conduct
-of the company during its brief tour of duty at Corfu, was reported
-to the Inspector-General of Fortifications in very favourable terms,
-by Lieutenant-Colonel Whitmore, R.E.[242]
-
------
-
-Footnote 242:
-
- To this company belonged private James Gordon, who lost an eye by
- accident in mining for the foundation of the palace, and was
- discharged at Woolwich 30th September, 1820, with a pension of
- 9_d._ a-day. Throughout his service of nine years he was a zealous
- and exemplary soldier, and bore about him the stamp and evidences
- of a loftier origin than his humble station gave reason to expect.
- Singular events in life sometimes occur that make contrasts at
- times appear almost fabulous. “The soldier turned peer,” has
- hitherto been the player’s jest, but it has at last become a
- veritable reality, for in September, 1848, this James Gordon, the
- private soldier, succeeded, as heir to his grandfather, to the
- titles of Viscount Kenmure and Lord Lochinvar.
-
------
-
-On the 5th June thirty-one men, chiefly masons and bricklayers,
-under Lieutenant Skene, R.E., arrived at Bermuda, to replace the men
-who had died during the epidemic. A party of variable strength, with
-the exception of occasional periods of temporary withdrawal, was
-permanently detached to execute the defences at Ireland Island.
-
-In August the Duke of Clarence again visited Chatham, and a full
-routine of military and field operations was carried on for his
-inspection. With the works, the schools, and model rooms, his Royal
-Highness expressed his approbation in language that was both
-flattering to the corps and honourable to the institution.
-
-In October the yellow fever again visited Barbadoes, but its
-violence, contrasted with former visitations, was considerably
-assuaged, and its fatality less felt among the population. Forty-six
-of the corps were present during its prevalence, and though nearly
-the whole of the number were attacked, only eleven died, and but
-fifteen were invalided. The loss in the company, however, was
-proportionally more severe than in any other corps in garrison, and
-the deterioration in the general health of the men drew the
-particular notice of the Commander of the Forces, who made repeated
-comments on it in his reports to England. In consequence of these
-reports, the company was relieved early in 1822, some months before
-the completion of its tour of service. Its character while in the
-West India command was flatteringly spoken of by Captain W. D.
-Smith, R.E. In one of his communications he wrote, “Its conduct, I
-have pride in saying, has been most exemplary.”
-
-Napoleon died at St. Helena on the 5th May, and his remains were
-deposited with quiet solemnity in an unpretending tomb, shadowed by
-a willow, in Slane’s valley. The company of sappers at the station
-took part in the funereal arrangements. The stone vault was built by
-privates John Warren and James Andrews. The body was lowered into
-its resting-place by two privates of the company, and other
-privates, appointed for the duty, refilled the grave, and secured
-all with plain Yorkshire slabs. Thus, without epitaph or memorial,
-were entombed the ashes of the most extraordinary man of modern
-times. As the necessity for retaining the company, now reduced, by
-deaths and the withdrawal of a detachment in 1819, to twenty-five of
-all ranks, no longer existed, it quitted the island and arrived at
-Woolwich on the 14th September. Private John Bennett was detained
-for three months after the removal of the company, and during that
-period he was employed with the Clerk of Works, in giving over the
-stores of the engineer department to the island storekeeper.[243]
-
------
-
-Footnote 243:
-
- Was an excellent clerk, and became in time a
- quartermaster-sergeant. After his discharge from the corps in
- 1843, he filled, for about ten years, important offices under the
- Surveyor-General of Prisons, and died while steward of Dartmoor
- Prison, in February, 1853, from a cold caught in that bleak
- quarter. The season was a peculiarly bitter and stormy one, during
- which three soldiers of the line, on escort duty, in crossing
- Dartmoor Heath, perished in the snow.
-
------
-
-The company in Upper Canada changed its head-quarters in June, from
-Kingston to Isle aux Noix, and afforded parties for service at
-Quebec and Fort George, both of which were recalled to Isle aux Noix
-in August. In November, 1822, the greater part of the company was
-removed to Quebec, and the remainder were retained for the works at
-Isle aux Noix.
-
-From July to November, a sergeant and nine men, chiefly carpenters
-and smiths, were employed by the Board of Longitude under Major
-Colby and Captain Kater, in the operations for determining the
-difference of longitude between the observatories at Paris and
-Greenwich; and visited ten of the principal trigonometrical stations
-in England. Besides attending to the laborious requirements of the
-camp, the party erected poles, and constructed stages or platforms
-wherever needed, on commanding sites and towers, for purposes of
-observation; and were also intrusted with the care of the
-philosophical instruments. In the professional operations of the
-season they took no part.[244]
-
------
-
-Footnote 244:
-
- Captain Kater, in his account of the operations published in the
- ‘Philosophical Transactions,’ 1828, p. 153, notices, by mistake,
- this party as belonging to the royal artillery. There were, it is
- true, two gunners of the regiment present, but they were employed
- as servants to the officers.
-
------
-
-In June, one sergeant and thirty-nine rank and file under Captain
-John Harper, R.E., were detached from Woolwich to Feversham, and
-after destroying the powder-mills and premises connected with them,
-returned to head-quarters in September.
-
-The first company of the corps, which had been at Gibraltar since
-1772 and was present at the celebrated siege a few years afterwards,
-was removed, in the course of relief, from that fortress to Woolwich
-in June.
-
-Breast or belt-plates of brass, in place of buckles, were adopted
-early in the year by permission of General Gother Mann. All ranks
-wore a plate of uniform device and dimensions, and each soldier paid
-for his own. The device consisted of the royal cipher, encircled by
-the garter, bearing the name of the corps and surmounted by a crown.
-
-A fluctuating detachment, not exceeding thirteen masons and miners
-under a corporal, was detached in the autumn from Devonport to St.
-Nicholas Island, and remained there for nearly four months repairing
-the fortifications.
-
-At the fall of the year the engineer commission to the West Indies,
-composed of Colonel Sir James Carmichael Smyth, Major Fanshawe, and
-Captain Oldfield inspected, in the course of their professional
-tour, the fourth company of sappers stationed at Barbadoes under the
-command of Captain Loyalty Peake. Its state was most creditable.
-Since its arrival in the command it had only lost one man and that
-from an accident. Whilst other troops quartered under the same roof
-were withered and sickly, the sappers were healthy—a fact that was
-ascribed to the attention of the officers, and the absence among the
-men of those intemperate habits, which in a hot and enervating
-climate, originate so many ailments.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners Plate XII.
- UNIFORM 1823. Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The small detachment at the Cape of Good Hope was much dispersed at
-this period. The men detached are traced at short intervals at Cape
-Town, Kaffir Drift, Wiltshire, Port Elizabeth, and New Post Kat
-River.
-
-The Corfu detachment of seven men was removed to Gibraltar, in the
-‘Frinsbury’ transport, in December, and arrived at the Rock on the
-6th March, 1824, bearing with it records of its uniform exemplary
-conduct and public utility. Being first-rate workmen, they were the
-leading men of their trades, and some of the best work at the palace
-was the result of their superior mechanical acquirements and skill.
-Sergeant John Hall was overseer and master carpenter for four years,
-and corporal Andrew Lawson, a man of considerable talent, was clerk
-of works, and also directed the masons and bricklayers.[245] Captain
-Streatfeild in parting with them, wrote “They are a very honest,
-trustworthy set of men, and do honour to the corps.” “The worst
-mechanic among them,” said Lieutenant G. Whitmore, “would be almost
-invaluable in the corps.” Before the company quitted Corfu, four
-deaths had occurred; four also took place in the small party that
-remained, one of whom, private Gamaliel Ashton, a bricklayer, was
-killed by falling from a scaffold while at work at the palace.[246]
-
------
-
-Footnote 245:
-
- Such was the sense entertained of his services, that Sir Frederick
- Adam, the Lord High Commissioner, after the detachment had reached
- Malta, recalled him to Corfu to superintend the civil works on the
- island. His position thus became anomalous, and, as far as
- military law and usage are concerned, unexampled for privilege and
- emolument. Besides his regimental pay, he received an allowance of
- 3_s._ 3_d._ a-day working pay, (afterwards increased to 4_s._
- 3_d._ a-day,) with a fine residence and free rations for his wife,
- family, and a servant. He had also a horse and boats at his
- command, was relieved from the performance of regimental duty, and
- was permitted at all times to wear plain clothes. Throughout the
- building of the palace, the Villa of Cardachio, and other
- important civil buildings, he was the clerk of the works, and Sir
- Frederic Adam took every occasion of applauding his talents and
- exertions. In April, 1834, after removal to Woolwich, sergeant
- Lawson was appointed clerk of works at Sierra Leone, where, after
- a brief period of service, during which he was bereaved of his
- wife, he died, leaving nine orphans to lament his loss. His eldest
- son was nominated to the appointment as the fittest person in the
- colony to discharge its professional duties, but the youth fell a
- sacrifice to the climate four days after his father’s decease. The
- eight remaining orphans were generously cared for by Sir Frederic
- Mulcaster, the inspector-general of fortifications and the
- executive of the corps at the Ordnance Office, who obtained from
- the officers of royal engineers and the civil gentlemen of the
- department sufficient means to free them from that distress, to
- which the absence of this benevolent support would have inevitably
- reduced them.
-
-Footnote 246:
-
- The remains of all were interred with unusual respectability, and
- the spots where they lie have been marked by neat tomb-stones—a
- graceful tribute from the survivors to the memory of the departed.
-
------
-
-Second-corporal John Smith was sent from Quebec in the summer to
-examine the freestone quarries of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and
-to report upon their capabilities and facilities for furnishing
-stones of certain dimensions for the service of the department. He
-started on his mission in a merchant schooner on the 7th August,
-and, with Captain Melville Glenie, of the 60th rifles, was nearly
-wrecked on the Beaumont shoals. The flag of distress and the shouts
-of the passengers being unheeded, corporal Smith procured an old
-musket and some powder, and having with some difficulty fired a few
-rounds from it, the situation of the vessel was observed by some
-pilots, who rescued the passengers. Next day the corporal
-re-embarked on board another vessel, and landing at Miramichi,
-visited the quarries there, and also at Remsheg, Pictou, Mergomish,
-and Nipisiguit. Upwards of two months were spent in completing his
-researches; and, returning to Quebec on the 16th October with
-specimens of the building stones and slates taken by him from the
-various quarries he had examined, he made a lucid report of their
-capabilities, &c, and detailed the terms upon which the owners of
-the properties were prepared to deal with the department. Colonel
-Durnford, the commanding royal engineer, expressed his entire
-satisfaction of the manner in which the duty was performed, and of
-the intelligence evinced by the corporal in his descriptive
-report.[247]
-
------
-
-Footnote 247:
-
- Smith, afterwards a sergeant, was a first-rate mason and foreman,
- and during his service of thirty two years, twenty-five of which
- were abroad, his abilities, experience, and precision were found
- of great benefit to the department. At Corfu, Vido, and Zante, he
- was entrusted with very important duties. Subsequently to his
- discharge in 1842 on a pension of 2_s._ 3½_d._ a-day, he
- superintended, on the part of the Admiralty, the building of the
- royal marine barracks at Woolwich by contract, and his vigilance
- prevented the employment of any of those artifices so commonly
- resorted to by contractors. He afterwards superintended for the
- Duke of Buckingham the building of a circular redoubt, partly of
- stone, for six guns, at his Grace’s ducal residence at Stowe: and
- in the inscription on one of the piers, his name is thus
- associated with the work:—
-
- Richard Plantagenet
- Duke of Buckingham & Chandos.
- Robert Wilcox, Captain Royal Navy.
- John Smith, Sergeant R^l Sappers and Miners.
-
-In September and October trials of the pontoons, invented
-respectively by Sir James Colleton and Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley,
-were made in the open part of the Medway near the Gunwharf, and at
-Rochester Bridge—on the 9th and 10th September, in the presence of a
-committee of seven officers of the royal artillery and royal
-engineers, Lieut.-General Cuppage, R.A., being the president; and on
-the 1st October in the presence of his Royal Highness the Duke of
-York. One or other of the rival systems was to supersede the use of
-the old English tin pontoons. To work the buoy pontoons of Sir James
-Colleton, seamen were lent from H.M.S. ‘Prince Regent.’ The third
-and sixth companies were employed with Colonel Pasley’s decked
-canoes. The manœuvres were exceedingly laborious, and the men
-were exposed a greater part of each day to very heavy rains. They
-not only, however, did everything to the satisfaction of his Royal
-Highness and of the officers composing the committee, but several
-distinguished naval officers declared it was impossible that any
-operations with boats could have been better or more quickly
-performed.[248]
-
------
-
-Footnote 248:
-
- Pasley’s ‘Narrative of Operations with the New Pontoons,’ 1824.
- Sir James Colleton’s ‘Buoy Pontoons.’
-
------
-
-From early in November to the 21st January, 1825, a party of ten
-privates with second-corporal Robert Shorter, was employed at
-Sheerness under the command of Lieutenant E. W. Durnford, R.E., in
-boring to ascertain the nature of the strata with a view to
-determine its practicability for building some permanent works of
-defence. The borings were carried on at all the salient points of
-the contemplated fortifications, ranging in depth from thirty to
-sixty feet. Borings were also made on the Isle of Grain, and the men
-of the party were occasionally employed at their trades in the
-engineer department. Corporal Shorter registered the daily progress
-and results of the operation;[249] but, although the intended works
-were never undertaken, the borings were not without interest in
-adding their quota of information to the cumulative discoveries of
-geological research.
-
------
-
-Footnote 249:
-
- Shorter was afterwards stationed for fourteen years at Corfu. For
- seven of his twenty-seven years' service he filled the office of
- quartermaster-sergeant, and was honoured with an annuity and medal
- for his meritorious conduct. He retired from the sappers on being
- appointed a Yeoman of the Queen’s Guard, and was the first
- non-commissioned officer of the corps who received a nomination to
- that ancient company. While he was all that could be desired in
- his corps in respect to efficiency and intelligence, in private
- life he was a thorough humourist, and the most simple incident,
- with scarcely an element for merriment in it, became by his droll
- inventorial recital, a subject of the richest amusement.
-
------
-
-The leather forage cap introduced in 1813, was this year superseded
-by a dark blue cap, called the Kilmarnock bonnet, with a yellow band
-manufactured in the web, and a peak and chin-strap. The crown was of
-immense circumference. See Plate XIII. The corporals wore the
-chevrons of their rank above the peak. The superior ranks had blue
-cloth caps, with peaks, chin-straps, and gold lace bands. The
-Kilmarnock bonnets were purchased by the men; the leather caps had
-been supplied by the public.
-
-About this period the army pattern sword for staff-sergeants and
-sergeants was adopted in the corps; but the swords introduced for
-the buglers were of the artillery pattern.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners Plate XIII.
- UNIFORM & WORKING DRESS, 1825 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 1825-1826.
-
-Dress—Curtailment of benefits by the change—Chacos—Survey of
- Ireland—Formation of the first company for the duty—Establishment
- of corps; company to Corfu—Second company for the survey—Efforts
- to complete the companies raised for it—Pontoon trials in presence
- of the Duke of Wellington—Western Africa—Third company for the
- survey; additional working pay—Employments and strength of
- the sappers in Ireland—Drummond Light; Slieve Snacht and
- Divis—Endurance of private Alexander Smith—Wreck of ‘Shipley’
- transport—Berbice; Corporal Sirrell at Antigua.
-
-
-Early in the year the breeches, long gaiters, and shoes, ceased to
-be worn by the corps, and in their stead were substituted light blue
-trousers, with scarlet stripes, and short Wellington boots. The
-coatee was stript of its frogging on the breast; and the skirts,
-with the slashes sewn transversely on the loins, were lengthened to
-the swell of the thigh. White turnbacks were added to the inner
-edges of the skirts, and brass grenades united the turnbacks near
-the bottom of the skirts. The working jacket was simply altered in
-the collar from the open to the close Prussian fashion, and the
-working trousers were dyed of a deeper grey.—See Plate XIII.
-
-These alterations were followed by curtailments of benefits
-heretofore enjoyed by the corps, inasmuch as the stockings, shirts,
-and forage caps, annually issued with the clothing, ceased to be
-provided at the public expense. The allowances for oil and emery,
-and shoes, were also abolished; but in lieu of the one pair of shoes
-formerly issued, and the compensation for a second pair, the corps
-had the advantage of receiving, yearly, two pairs of short
-Wellington boots.
-
-The low chaco of 1817 gave place to one of about ten inches in
-height, bearing a goose feather of a foot long in an exploded
-grenade. The ornaments consisted of scales secured by lions' heads,
-the garter and motto encircling the royal cipher surmounted by a
-crown, and also a cluster of forked lightning, winged. For
-protection to the neck in wet weather, a varnished canvas ear-cover
-was attached to the back of the cap.—See Plate XIII. The ornaments
-on the staff-sergeants' chacos were of excellent gilt, and a band of
-rich silk, embossed with acorns and oak leaves around the top of the
-cap, gave it an elegant appearance. The sergeants' ornaments were
-manufactured of a metal resembling copper, and the black bands were
-of plain narrow silk. Both ranks wore white heckle feathers.
-
-In June, 1824, a committee of the House of Commons recommended the
-trigonometrical survey of Ireland, with the view of apportioning
-equally the local burdens, and obtaining a general valuation of the
-whole country. The measure was sanctioned, and Colonel Thomas Colby,
-R.E., was appointed to superintend the work. It being intended that
-the survey should be conducted under military supervision, Major
-William Reid suggested the advantage to be derived from the
-co-operation of the royal sappers and miners in carrying out its
-subordinate details. Colonel Colby after due reflection, the result
-of a discussion of nearly six weeks' duration with Major Reid,
-considering the plan to be not only practicable but desirable, made
-known his wishes to the Duke of Wellington, then Master-General of
-the Ordnance, and on the 1st December, 1824, his Grace obtained a
-royal warrant for the formation of a company of sixty-two
-non-commissioned officers and men, to be employed in the operations
-of the survey in Ireland.[250]
-
------
-
-Footnote 250:
-
- ‘Report Army and Ordnance Expenditure,’ Minutes of Evidence, p.
- 617. ‘Naval and Military Gazette.’ Pasley’s ‘Mil. Policy,’
- Introd., p. 37, 4th edit.
-
------
-
-This company was at once organized at Chatham; and the men, selected
-from the most intelligent of the corps at the station, were
-specially trained for the duty by Lieutenant-Colonel Pasley. It,
-however, remained for Colonel Colby, in giving effect to his great
-and comprehensive system, to develop and enlarge the acquirements
-and efficiency of the men, by adapting them to the various details
-and necessities of this novel service. In doing so he encountered
-difficulties of no ordinary character; but eventually he succeeded
-in achieving the end he sought, not without credit to the mass whom
-he moulded and fashioned to the purpose, as well as great honour to
-himself.
-
-By the augmentation of this company the establishment of the corps
-was increased to thirteen companies, of 814 of all ranks, including
-the staff. The first detachment of one colour-sergeant and twenty
-rank and file was conveyed to Dublin in March under the command of
-Lieutenant Edward Vicars, R.E., and was soon removed from Mountjoy
-to Dromore, where, in April, further reinforcements arrived,
-completing the company to its establishment; and the whole were
-distributed in small sections to Antrim, Belfast, Coleraine,
-Dungiven, Londonderry, &c., from whence the corps, by degrees,
-traced its progress all over Ireland. Major Reid was appointed to
-command the _first_ survey company, which was numbered the
-thirteenth.
-
-On the 24th March, the sixth company, of sixty-two total, sailed for
-Corfu on board the ‘Baltic’ merchant transport, and landed there on
-the 14th May. This addition to the command was made at the instance
-of the Ionian government for the purpose of executing the works and
-fortifications at Corfu and Vido. By the warrant for raising this
-company, dated 4th April, 1825, the corps mustered fourteen
-companies, and counted 876 officers and soldiers of all ranks. All
-the regimental and working disbursements of the company, and of
-others arriving at the station in periodical relief, were for a
-number of years paid from the Ionian exchequer.
-
-While the instruction of the first survey company was still in
-progress, steps were taken for the formation of another company for
-the same service. The Duke of Wellington expressed his conviction of
-the propriety of the measure from the satisfactory advancement
-already made in the professional education of the company raised for
-the duty early in the year. On the 4th April, 1825, therefore, his
-Grace obtained another warrant for the employment of a second
-company in the operations of the survey of Great Britain and
-Ireland. This company was numbered the fourteenth; and being of the
-same numerical organization as the other companies, viz., sixty-two
-men, the establishment of the corps was raised from 876 to 938.
-
-At Harwich, Hull, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Liverpool, Cornwall, Fort
-George, as well as in London and Edinburgh, recruiting for these
-companies was carried on very briskly. Recruiting at Dublin was also
-permitted; and some draftsmen from the Dublin Society School were,
-about this period, enlisted for the survey companies. The Military
-Asylum at Chelsea and the Hibernian School were likewise canvassed
-to procure eligible boys for training; but such was the
-circumscribed nature of the education imparted to the children at
-Chelsea, that of the number selected to join the companies, a few
-only were found that gave promise of future aptitude and usefulness;
-and of those who succeeded, none ever distinguished themselves by
-their talents. From the Hibernian School ten boys were received, all
-of whom were clever and intelligent; but one lad far outshone his
-comrades, and in time, by his zeal, extensive mathematical
-attainments, and varied acquirements, gained the highest position in
-the sappers on the survey. The person alluded to is Quartermaster
-William Young.
-
-The fourteenth company quitted Chatham for the survey, and landed at
-Belfast, its first head-quarters, on the 15th July.
-
-On the 26th September, a trial of the capabilities of the pontoons
-invented by Sir James Colleton, Colonel Pasley, and Major Blanshard,
-took place at Chatham in the presence of the Duke of Wellington; and
-the men of the corps employed on the occasion displayed much zeal,
-spirit, and activity. Sergeant Jenkin Jones was particularly praised
-for his conduct in managing the pontoons of Major Blanshard; and as
-the Master-General arrived a day earlier than was expected, and
-ordered at night the exhibition to take place the next morning, much
-of the success of the efforts in favour of the cylindrical pontoons
-is ascribed to the sergeant’s able and zealous arrangements and
-personal exertions. This induced Colonel Pasley to recommend
-sergeant Jones as a non-commissioned officer fit to be entrusted
-with any difficult or important detached duty, which might save the
-services of an officer. One private, William Berry, fell from a raft
-during the trial, and was drowned.
-
-Sergeant William Addison and second-corporal James White embarked at
-Portsmouth on board the ‘Despatch’ in November for the coast of
-Africa, and were employed under the direction of Captain R. Boteler,
-R.E., in surveying the British dependencies and forts at Sierra
-Leone and the Gold Coast. The corporal died on the service, and the
-sergeant landed at Portsmouth 10th August, 1826, and rejoined his
-corps.
-
-A third survey company, of sixty-two non-commissioned officers and
-men, was formed in December, under a royal warrant, dated 20th
-October, 1825, and was numbered the sixteenth. The establishment of
-the corps was thus augmented from 938 to 1,000 officers and
-soldiers. The rates of working pay authorized by the successive
-warrants were limited to the three ordinary classes of 6_d._, 9_d._,
-and 1_s._ a-day; but extraordinary powers were granted to Colonel
-Colby, of awarding increased rates, proportionate to the attainments
-and exertions of the men, up to 2_s._ a-day. The maximum allowance
-was rarely bestowed, and then only upon non-commissioned officers,
-whose undoubted talents and services rendered them deserving of the
-distinction which the exclusiveness conferred.
-
-By the end of the year the effective men on the survey counted 109
-of all ranks, who were chiefly dispersed in the field. Several were
-employed in offices as draftsmen and computers; but at this early
-period very few were intrusted with any particular responsibility.
-Civilian assistants, for the most part, were second to the officers,
-and aided in superintending the management of the districts; but in
-the field, the sappers took the lead as surveyors, never working as
-chainmen, or subordinately to the civilians. As the duty was new,
-their qualifications required tact and practice before a fair return
-of progress could be realized. In August very few had proved
-themselves of sufficiently matured acquirements to merit advancement
-to Colonel Colby’s classes, and five only of the number had
-graduated as far as 1_s._ 4_d._ a-day.
-
-The third survey company proceeded to Ireland in September. In
-December the total force there numbered 129 of all ranks, and 61 men
-were under training at Chatham.
-
-At the close of the year a party of the corps was attached to
-Captain Drummond to assist him in carrying on experiments and
-observations with his lamp and heliostat. The observing station was
-on Divis Mountain, near Belfast, and the season was fearfully
-inclement. Frequently the mountain and the camp were enveloped in
-snow, and the blowing of a keen cold wind made their situation
-anything but agreeable. On two or three occasions a storm visited
-their desolate location, and carried away in its blast, tents,
-baggage, and stores. Still the men were sturdy in frame, willing in
-disposition, and exerted themselves in the discharge of their duties
-under trials of no ordinary character. A few men of the party,
-thirteen in number, were removed to Slieve Snacht in Donegal, to
-exhibit the light, that it might be observed from Divis. The
-distance between the heights was sixty-six miles. The camp on Snacht
-was at an altitude of 2,000 feet, and the party peculiarly exposed.
-Few in number, they were ill able to buffet with the tempests of
-those cold regions; “and the tents were so frequently blown down,”
-and had become so shattered and torn, “that, after the first few
-days, they abandoned them, and constructed huts of rough stones,
-filling the interstices with turf.” On this bleak mountain the
-success of the light was first proved. At night the lamp was
-directed on Divis. It was then dark, and both the camps were covered
-with snow. The wind blew piercingly over the mountain tops, and
-almost flayed the faces of the men as they worked. But it was on
-that stormy night that the light, first seen by the sapper sentry,
-“burst into view with surpassing splendour,” and afterwards became
-one of the most useful agencies in the prosecution of the
-survey.[251]
-
------
-
-Footnote 251:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers,’ iv.; preface, pp. xiv. xvii.
-
------
-
-Of this mountain party one man in particular was noticed for his
-hardihood and endurance. This was private Alexander Smith. In the
-morning he would leave the camp, and, after journeying about twenty
-miles, return to the height weighed down with a mule’s load, and on
-gaining the summit, would after relieving himself of his burden,
-resume his work in the camp, without exhibiting any symptoms of
-fatigue, or evincing a desire for rest. On one occasion, having been
-at Buncrana, about ten miles from the station, he was returning late
-with his freight, comprising a side of mutton, a jar of spirits, a
-number of lesser articles, and a bag of letters. Wrapped up in his
-greatcoat, and his cap pulled over his ears, he commenced to pick
-his way up the ascent; but the tempest beat against him, the
-piercing wind opposed his progress, and the snow covered alike the
-lone traveller and the waste. As he encountered this war of
-elements, darkness closed upon him, and, losing his track, he passed
-the night exposed to the pitiless storm, wandering about on the
-mountain. At day-break he crawled into the camp—a picture that gave
-a melancholy interest to the wild landscape around; but such was his
-endurance, and such his fortitude, that beyond the pain of numbness,
-he felt no inconvenience from the sufferings and exertions of that
-dreadful night. The devotion of this man was the admiration of
-Captain Drummond, and his promotion to second-corporal was the
-reward of his willing zeal. Ultimately he reached the rank of
-sergeant, and was discharged in October, 1839, from a chest
-complaint, which traced its origin to his labours and exposure on
-Slieve Snacht.
-
-The third company, of sixty strong, under Lieutenant Gregory, R.E.,
-embarked at Woolwich, 26th February, on board the ‘Shipley’
-transport for the West Indies, and was wrecked on the morning of the
-19th April on the Cobbler’s Rocks near Barbadoes. The ship had made
-the land at half-past ten o’clock the preceding evening, and,
-hauling up to S.S.E., the agent on board counselled that the ship
-should stand off till 3 o’clock. Soon after 12 at night, the master,
-contrary to the naval officer’s advice, ordered the ship to stand
-for the land, and went to bed, leaving in charge a man who soon
-became intoxicated and fell asleep. Thus left to herself, the vessel
-got out of her course, and about 3 A.M. dashed with a frightful
-crash upon the reef. At this time it was pitch dark, and the
-frequency of the shocks split and tore the ship in every direction.
-While the crew and the sappers were getting tackle ready to hoist
-the long-boat out, the cook-house caught fire, but it was promptly
-extinguished with wet blankets and sails. The freshness of the wind
-driving the sea against the shore, and the steepness of the cliffs
-which were higher than the ship’s royal mainmast, made it
-impracticable to land a boat; but the boatswain, taking with him a
-deep sea-line, gained a craggy pinnacle on the rocks, and throwing
-it to a black fisherman on the top, who chanced to reach the spot at
-the moment, a six-inch tow-line was quickly passed to him, by which
-the troops, with their wives and families, in slings and cradles,
-worked themselves to the summit of the precipice. In ten minutes
-after the ‘Shipley’ became a total wreck, and the company lost its
-entire baggage, equipment, &c. Lieutenant Gregory was the last to
-quit the sinking ship. Being almost naked and barefooted, a number
-of greatcoats and ample land-carriage were sent for the company; and
-in this state, under an oppressive sun, they reached their quarters
-at St. Anne’s on the evening of the 19th April.[252]
-
-A party of this company was constantly detached to Berbice for the
-service of the engineer department; and second-corporal Thomas
-Sirrell, an able artificer, superintended the construction of the
-iron hospital at Antigua, where he died. To acquire a knowledge of
-the application of iron to be used in the erection of barracks in
-the West Indies, he had been specially employed for six months under
-Lieutenant Brandreth in the foundries at Birmingham.
-
------
-
-Footnote 252:
-
- ‘Morning Herald,’ June 5, 1826.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1827-1829.
-
-Augmentation—Reinforcement to Bermuda—Companies for Rideau
- Canal—Reinforcement to the Cape—Monument to the memory of
- General Wolfe—Increase to the survey companies—Supernumerary
- promotions—Measurement of Lough Foyle base—Suggestion of sergeant
- Sim for measuring across the river Roe—Survey companies inspected
- by Major-General Sir James C. Smyth; opinion of their services by
- Sir Henry Hardinge—Sergeant-major Townsend—Demolition of the
- Glacière Bastion at Quebec—Banquet to fifth company by Lord
- Dalhousie—Service of the sappers at the citadel of Quebec—Notice
- of sergeants Dunnett and John Smith—Works to be executed by
- contract—Trial of pontoons, and exertions of corporal James
- Forbes—Epidemic at Gibraltar—Island of Ascension; corporal
- Beal—Forage-caps—Company withdrawn from Nova Scotia—Party to
- Sandhurst College, and usefulness of corporal Forbes.
-
-
-Great inconvenience was felt in carrying on the public works abroad,
-from the inadequacy of the strength of the corps to supply the
-number of workmen for services in which their employment would have
-been useful and economical; and as very heavy expenses had been
-incurred, in having recourse to a greater proportion of civil
-workmen, at high wages, than would otherwise have been necessary,
-General Gother Mann, in July, 1826, submitted some suggestions on
-the subject to the Master-General and Board, and obtained their
-authority to carry out his plans.
-
-In December, consequently, orders were given for the formation of a
-company of 81 strong, for employment on the works at Bermuda, and
-for augmenting the company already there from 51 to 70 privates. The
-company was accordingly formed in January, 1827, and with the
-reinforcement to complete the other company, sailed from Devonport
-in the ‘Hebe’ freightship, and landed at Bermuda on the 25th of May.
-The sappers at the station were then divided between St. George’s
-and Ireland Island.
-
-A royal warrant, dated 26th March, 1827, confirmed the raising of
-the company for Bermuda, and ordered a further augmentation of two
-companies of eighty-one strong each for the works of the Rideau
-Canal in Canada. The fifteenth and seventeenth companies were
-appointed for this service under Captains Victor and Savage, R.E.
-The former landed there from the ‘Southworth’ transport on the 1st
-of June, and the latter from the ‘Haydon,’ on the 17th of
-September.[253] The establishment of the corps now reached nineteen
-companies, and counted, of all ranks, 1,262.
-
------
-
-Footnote 253:
-
- On the removal of the fifteenth company to Canada in March, the
- Portsmouth station was without a company until November, 1827,
- when the eleventh company was sent there from Chatham.
-
-The sappers at the Cape of Good Hope were reinforced to thirty of
-all ranks by the arrival of one sergeant and eleven privates in
-August. At this period the men were chiefly employed at Cape Town
-and Graham’s Town. Occasionally, men are traced at Wynberg, Franch
-Hoek, and Simon’s Town. The detachment rendered essential aid in the
-execution of the services of the engineer department, and the
-necessity for maintaining its numerical efficiency was represented
-by Major General Bourke and Lord Charles Somerset.
-
-The fifth company at Quebec, on the 15th of November, 1827, was
-present at the laying of the foundation stone of the monument
-erected to the memory of General Wolfe. All the masonic tools
-required for the ceremony were made by men of the company, and the
-stone was lowered into its bed by some selected masons with
-colour-sergeant Dunnett. The formal laying of the stone was
-accomplished by the Earl of Dalhousie and Mr. James Thompson, a
-venerable man in the ninety-fifth year of his age, the only survivor
-in Canada of the memorable battle of Quebec, in which Wolfe fell. A
-few days afterwards, the silver trowel used on the occasion was
-generously presented by his lordship to sergeant Dunnett.
-
-Great interest was taken by the Duke of Wellington in the survey of
-Ireland, and he was anxious that it should be prosecuted with all
-possible despatch. Augmenting and completing the three companies
-being considered the most important means to facilitate that object,
-his Grace and the Honourable Board, on the 1st January, sanctioned
-an increase to the survey companies of nineteen privates each, and
-on the 13th of March, a further addition of thirty privates; both of
-which augmented the survey force from 186 to 273 of all ranks, and
-the establishment of the corps from 1,262 to 1,349 officers and men.
-
-At the commencement of the survey, all promotion was suspended for a
-time, to enable Colonel Colby to select the ablest men for
-preferment. He found great difficulty in choosing individuals
-qualified for it; but in less than two years after, so satisfactory
-was the improvement made in the attainments and efficiency of the
-companies, that the Colonel felt it essential to create by
-authority, supernumerary appointments as a reward for past diligence
-and an incitement to future exertion. This measure was the more
-necessary, as the most important part of the work was performed by
-the non-commissioned officers, who were mostly detached in charge of
-small parties of the corps with an equal number of civil chainmen.
-Each non-commissioned officer was thus the chief executive of a
-certain portion of work, and was responsible for its correct and
-rapid execution to the officers of the divisions. On the 17th of
-January, the supernumerary appointments were sanctioned by the Duke
-of Wellington without limit as to number, and Colonel Colby
-made ample use of the reward. The advantage enjoyed by the
-supernumeraries extended only to pay, they receiving the rate of the
-rank to which they were appointed. Service in the supernumerary
-grades did not reckon for their benefit towards pension.
-
-From the 6th of September, 1827, to the 20th of November, 1828, with
-occasional intervals of cessation, a detachment varying from two
-sergeants and twenty-three rank and file, to two sergeants and six
-rank and file, were employed on the measurement of Lough Foyle base
-in the county of Londonderry. A strong detachment of the royal
-artillery was also employed on this service. The duties of the
-sappers did not extend to the scientific and more precise details of
-the operation, but were limited to those subsidiary services which
-were essential to the rigid execution of the former. Their
-attention, in fact, was confined to the labours of the camp, the
-placement of the triangular frames, pickets, trestles, and such
-other incidental services as were indispensable to obtain an exact
-level alignment for the application of the measuring bars. A
-non-commissioned officer invariably attended to the adjusting
-screws; another frequently registered the observations, another
-attended to the set of the rollers and the regulation of the plates;
-and a fourth, with a few men, erected the base tents, moved them
-forward to the succeeding series of bars, and looked to the security
-of the apparatus for the night.[254] All these duties, though of a
-subordinate nature, nevertheless required the exercise of
-intelligence, and much careful attention on the part of those
-employed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 254:
-
- Yolland’s ‘Lough Foyle Base,’ p. 25-27.
-
-In connexion with the base operations, the name of sergeant Thomas
-Sim of the corps, is noticed with credit. Carrying the measurement
-across the river Roe, about 450 feet broad, was, through his
-ingenuity, found a more simple matter than had been expected. After
-giving a good deal of consideration to the subject, the sergeant
-proposed a plan, which enabled the measurement to be completed in
-one day and verified the next. This was accomplished, by driving,
-with the assistance of a small pile engine, stout pickets to the
-depth of about six feet into the sand and clay, in the exact line of
-the base, then placing on the heads of the pickets, by means of a
-mortice, a stretcher perfectly horizontal, and finally, laying upon
-the upper surfaces of the stretchers, a simple rectangular frame,
-with two cross pieces to support the feet of the camels or
-tripods.[255]
-
------
-
-Footnote 255:
-
- Ibid., p. 28.
-
------
-
-By the month of August, the force of the sappers in Ireland amounted
-to 26 non-commissioned officers, 227 privates, 6 buglers and 11
-boys, total 270. In September, the survey companies were inspected
-by Major-General Sir James Carmichael Smyth, royal engineers, and in
-his report he stated, “when the detached nature of the duty is
-considered, and how the soldier is necessarily left to himself, the
-appearance of the men under arms, as well as the zeal and goodwill
-they evince in the performance of a duty so new and so laborious,
-are very much to their credit.” In March previously, Sir Henry
-Hardinge, in his evidence before the Select Committee on Public
-Income and Expenditure, spoke of the services of the corps on the
-survey, as being cheap and successful. To put the question fairly at
-issue, certain districts of the same nature were conducted, some by
-engineers with sappers and miners; others, with engineer officers
-and civil persons and it was satisfactorily proved, that the
-progress made by the sappers under military authority, was greater
-than that made by the civil surveyors, and the cheapness
-commensurate.[256]
-
------
-
-Footnote 256:
-
- ‘Second Report Ordnance Estimates,’ 1828, printed 12th June, 1828,
- p. 71, 72.
-
------
-
-On the 24th of January, sergeant-major Thomas Townsend was
-removed from the corps as second lieutenant and adjutant to the
-second battalion, 60th royal rifles, through the intercession of
-Lieutenant-Colonel Fitzgerald who commanded that regiment, and
-in the lapse of years became a captain. In 1844, he retired from
-the regiment by the sale of his commission, and obtained a
-barrack-mastership under the Ordnance.
-
-To proceed with the formation of a new citadel at Quebec, it became
-necessary to remove a portion of the old French works called the
-Glacière Bastion, comprising the face and flank, about 260 feet in
-length and 25 feet in height, to give place to a new counterguard
-intended to cover the escarp of both faces of Dalhousie Bastion from
-the high ground on the plains of Abraham. This was done by mining,
-in which service the fifth company of the corps was employed. The
-whole operations being completed with the desired efficiency by the
-19th of February, the Earl of Dalhousie, then Governor-General,
-accompanied by his staff and a vast assemblage of civil and military
-persons, attended to witness the demolition. The mines were to have
-been fired at three points to insure the entire mass coming down at
-once, but the sapper[257] stationed at the third mine, without
-waiting for the necessary signals, applied his match to the charge,
-and the whole of the mines, twenty in number, were simultaneously
-exploded, crumbling the escarp to pieces, without projecting a stone
-fifty feet from its original position, and levelling at one crash
-the whole of the work. The effect produced far surpassed the
-expectations of the officers employed. Of the services of the
-company, the commanding royal engineer, in his orders of the day,
-thus expressed himself: “To colour-sergeant Dunnett, sergeant Young,
-acting-sergeant Smith, and the non-commissioned officers and
-privates of the fifth company, Colonel Durnford begs that Captain
-Melhuish will convey his high approbation of the zeal and ability
-with which they have performed this portion of practical duty, and
-to assure them, that a report of it shall be made to the
-Inspector-General of Fortifications, in order that the success of
-the operations may be recorded to the credit of the fifth
-company.”[258] To mark his sense of the services of the sappers on
-the occasion, the Earl of Dalhousie, in a style of rare munificence,
-entertained them with a ball and supper on the evening of the 7th of
-March, in the casemated barracks erected by themselves in the
-citadel. All the wives, families, and friends of the company
-attended. Sir Noel and Lady Hill, the Honourable Colonel and Mrs.
-Gore, Captain Maule, aide-de-camp to his Excellency, the officers of
-royal engineers and artillery, and several officers of the garrison
-were present. After supper, the officers of the company and
-gentlemen visitors took their stations at the head of the table, and
-at the call of Captain Melhuish, the usual toasts were disposed of.
-After due honour had been paid to the toast for the health of the
-Earl of Dalhousie, Captain Maule then rose and spoke as follows:—
-
-“Sergeant Dunnett and soldiers of the fifth company of royal sappers
-and miners, nothing will be more agreeable to me, than the duty of
-reporting to his lordship, the Commander of the Forces, the manner
-in which you have drunk his health. The trait in a soldier’s
-character, which above all others, recommends him to the notice of
-his General, is a cordial co-operation on his part, heart and hand,
-in the undertaking of his officers more immediately placed over him.
-The fifth company of royal sappers and miners have ever eminently
-displayed this feeling, but on no occasion more conspicuously than
-lately in the demolition of the old fortifications. The skill with
-which this work was devised, the zeal and rapidity with which it was
-executed, and the magnificent result, will long remain a memorial of
-all employed in it; and if I may judge from the manner in which you
-have done honour to his lordship’s health, this mark of his
-approbation has not been bestowed on men who will soon forget it. I
-beg all present will join me in drinking the health of Captain
-Melhuish, the officers, non-commissioned officers, and privates of
-the fifth company of royal sappers and miners.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 257:
-
- Corporal Daniel Brown.
-
-Footnote 258:
-
- ‘Memoir of a Practice in Mining at Quebec.’
-
------
-
-Thanks being returned for the company by Captain Melhuish, sergeant
-Dunnett, in a most soldierlike manner, gave the health of the ladies
-and gentlemen who had honoured the company with their presence. Soon
-after, the company retired to the ball-room, accompanied by the
-officers and their ladies, and the festive entertainment was kept up
-with spirit and propriety until five o’clock the next morning.[259]
-
------
-
-Footnote 259:
-
- ‘Quebec Mercury,’ February, 1828.
-
------
-
-In the erection of the citadel at Quebec, the sappers were
-constantly engaged, and some of its chief work was executed by them.
-The superintendence was carried on by the non-commissioned
-officers—colour-sergeant Dunnett[260] and acting-sergeant John
-Smith[261] being the principal foremen. Soon after the arrival of
-the company, Mr. Hare,[262] the foreman of works at Quebec, died;
-and on the completion of the works at Kingston, the master mason
-there was sent to Quebec; but so efficiently had the masons' and
-bricklayers' work been executed under military supervision, that
-Colonel Durnford, the commanding royal engineer, ordered the
-recently-arrived master mason to attend to the repairs of the old
-fortifications and buildings, and not to interfere with the
-superintendents at the new citadel. The company quitted Quebec in
-October, 1831, with an excellent character, both as workmen and
-soldiers. Only five men had deserted during the period of the
-station, two of whom were recovered to the service and pardoned by
-the Earl of Dalhousie. This was another proof of his lordship’s high
-estimation of the services and conduct of the company.
-
------
-
-Footnote 260:
-
- Was the principal military foreman, and had under his charge from
- 100 to 200 masons, with their labourers. In the arrangement and
- management of this working force he displayed much tact and
- judgment, and his work was always laid out and executed with
- exactness and success. For his services he received a gratuity and
- medal and a pension of 1_s._ 10½_d._ a-day in April, 1834. He was
- soon afterwards appointed foreman of masons in Canada, where he
- died.
-
-Footnote 261:
-
- See page 260.
-
-Footnote 262:
-
- Joseph Hare had formerly been a sergeant in the corps, and on his
- discharge in October, 1822, was appointed foreman of masons at
- Quebec.
-
------
-
-A select committee on public income and expenditure sat early this
-year to scrutinize the Ordnance estimates. By this committee the
-duties and services of the corps were considered. In the report upon
-the evidence adduced, the committee strongly recommended that all
-work which admitted of being measured should be done by contract,
-and that the sappers and miners employed on buildings at day-work
-should be diminished.[263] The effect of this measure was simply to
-confine the labours of the corps to the repairs and fortifications,
-and occasionally to building, without reducing its numerical
-establishment.
-
------
-
-Footnote 263:
-
- ‘Second Report Ordnance Est.,’ 1828, printed 12th June, 1828, p.
- 25.
-
------
-
-Another trial of pontoons took place at Chatham in July, and the
-exertions of the detachment employed on the occasion under Captain
-J. S. Macauley, R.E., were warmly acknowledged by Sir James
-Colleton, one of the competitors. Captain White of the royal staff
-corps, who was engaged on the part of Sir James, thus wrote of the
-sappers:—“During my long acquaintance with military men, I never
-witnessed in any troops a greater determination to perform to the
-utmost of their power the duty on which they were placed. Where all
-have done their duty with such energy, I cannot make any distinction
-in conveying to you my good wishes towards them, except in the
-conduct of corporal James Forbes, who appears to me to be a
-first-rate non-commissioned officer, and who has on this occasion
-done his duty in a manner highly creditable to himself.”[264]
-
------
-
-Footnote 264:
-
- See page 296.
-
------
-
-An epidemic fever of nearly equal severity to the one of 1804 raged
-at Gibraltar in September and October. The greater part of the
-sappers at the Rock were seized with the complaint and nineteen
-died. Being quartered in the barracks near the unhealthy district
-and in the vicinity of the line of drains, the companies furnished
-the first victims to the disease;[265] and to lessen the mortality
-which this circumstance was likely to induce, they were, for a time,
-encamped on a rocky flat below Windmill Hill. The deaths at the
-fortress during the prevalence of the fever were 507 military and
-1,700 civilians.[266]
-
------
-
-Footnote 265:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1831, p. 235.
-
-Footnote 266:
-
- Martin’s ‘British Colonies,’ v. p. 79.
-
------
-
-Lieutenant H. R. Brandreth, R.E., early in 1829 proceeded to
-Ascension, and having made a survey of the island, returned to
-England and reported on its capabilities for defence and eligibility
-for an Admiralty station. Lance-corporal William Beal was attached
-to that officer and employed under him from March to September. His
-duty was chiefly that of a clerk, but he also assisted in making the
-measurements of the survey, and in collecting geological specimens
-to illustrate the character of the strata. In the discharge of these
-services, his zeal and intelligence were found very useful, and on
-his return he was deservedly promoted to be second-corporal.
-
-In June the forage caps were somewhat altered. The yellow band was
-abolished, and hoops and stiffening were forbidden. The cap was now
-of plain blue web, with leather peak and chin strap. The sergeants'
-caps were of plain blue cloth, hooped and stiffened, with three
-chevrons of gold lace in front over the peak. The staff-sergeants
-retained the gold bands.
-
-Nova Scotia, which ceased to be a station for the corps in 1819, was
-again opened for a company this year, which landed from the ‘Sophia’
-transport on the 10th June, 1829. A company of the corps has ever
-since been employed there in carrying on the ordinary works and
-fortifications, and in the erection of the citadel.
-
-Twelve privates under corporal James Forbes, were, in September, for
-the first time, sent to Sandhurst to afford practical instruction in
-sapping, mining, &c., to the gentlemen cadets at the Royal Military
-College. The term extended over September and October, and the party
-returned to Chatham with the highest character. Much praise was
-awarded to corporal Forbes for his exertions and attainments, and
-his promotion to the rank of sergeant followed in consequence. From
-that time a detachment has, during each term, been attached to the
-college for the same useful purpose, and has invariably performed
-its duties with credit and effect.
-
-
-
-
- 1830-1832.
-
-The chaco—Brigade-Major Rice Jones—Island of Ascension—Notice of
- corporal Beal—Detachment to the Tower of London—Chatham during the
- Reform agitation—Staff appointments—Sergeant M‘Laren the first
- medallist in the corps—Terrific hurricane at Barbadoes;
- distinguished conduct of colour-sergeant Harris and corporal
- Muir—Subaqueous destruction of the ‘Arethusa’ at Barbadoes—Return
- of a detachment to the Tower of London—Rideau canal; services of
- the sappers in its construction; casualties; and disbandment of
- the companies—Costume—First detachment to the Mauritius—Notice of
- corporal Reed—Pendennis Castle.
-
-
-The chaco was altered this year to one of a reduced form, and
-decorated with yellow lines and tassels, which fell upon the
-shoulders and looped to the centre of the breast. The brasses
-comprised a radiated star with three guns, carriages, and sponges,
-surmounted by a crown. The scales were, for the first time, worn
-under the chin, and a goose feather ten inches long, was held
-upright by an exploded shell. The ear-cover was removed, and a
-patent leather band was substituted.—See Plate XIV., 1832. The
-sergeants and staff-sergeants had chacos of a superior description
-with ornaments of fine gilt, bearing guns, carriages, and sponges of
-silver. The lines and tassels were of gold cord, and were worn only
-at reviews or on special occasions. Oil-skin covers were sometimes
-worn by the officers, and oil-skin cases for the feather by all
-ranks in rainy weather. Worsted mitts were also adopted at this time
-instead of leather gloves. The sergeants and the staff wore white
-Berlin gloves.
-
-Major Frank Stanway, R.E., was appointed brigade-major to the corps
-on the 8th June, vice Lieutenant-Colonel Rice Jones removed on
-promotion. The post had been held by Colonel Jones for seventeen
-years. Under his guidance, a successful check was given to those
-deep-rooted habits of indiscipline which had characterized the
-corps, and cramped its efficiency. This was not accomplished without
-encountering many obstacles; but firm in his purpose, and decided in
-his bearing and orders, he soon reaped the reward of his
-perseverance and diligence; and when the custom of the service
-required that he should relinquish his charge, he delivered the
-corps to his successor in a state that reflected upon him the
-highest honour.
-
-Second-corporal William Beal returned to Ascension in August with
-Captain Brandreth, and continued with him till September, 1831.
-During this period he assisted in marking out the sites of the
-principal works proposed to be erected for the improvement and
-establishment of the colony as a naval victualling station, and
-performed his duty in an able and satisfactory manner.[267]
-
------
-
-Footnote 267:
-
- Was educated for a Baptist minister; but an introduction to Dr.
- Olinthus Gregory failing to realize his hopes, he enlisted in the
- corps in 1828. His intelligence caused him to be chosen for the
- two surveys of Ascension. He afterwards served at Bermuda, and at
- Halifax, Nova Scotia. At the former station he was wounded by the
- accidental firing of a mine whilst blasting rock, and submitted to
- the amputation of portions of his fingers with stoical composure.
- Wherever he went he took with him a small but valuable library,
- and was well read in the latest issues from the press. Byron,
- Carlyle, and some abstruse German writers, were his favourite
- authors. No man in his condition of life was, perhaps, as
- conversant with the roots and eccentricities of the English
- language as Beal, and his mental endowments rendered him capable
- of grasping any subject, however deep, and turning it to profit
- both in his duties and in his daily intercourse with men. Late in
- his service he attained proficiency as a draughtsman, and later
- still, an enterprising engineer in London submitted a plan for a
- system of sewers in the metropolis, which was accompanied by a
- report drawn up by this sergeant. He left the corps in April,
- 1849, with a pension of 2_s._; and the knowledge and experience he
- had acquired by application and travel, are now being employed,
- with advantage to his interests, in one of the settlements on the
- Rideau Canal in Canada.
-
------
-
-Reform was, at this period, the turbulent cry of the country, and
-masses of the people in consequence of its delay, assumed a menacing
-attitude. Anticipating an outbreak in the metropolis, one sergeant,
-two corporals, and twenty-eight privates under the command of
-Lieutenant George Page, R.E., marched to the Tower on the 8th
-November. The two following days the detachment was under arms with
-the other troops to put down any attempt at insurrection, but both
-days passed off without any demonstration requiring the interference
-of the military. After constructing some temporary works in and
-about the Tower, the party returned to Woolwich 22nd January, 1831.
-
-At Chatham during the same period, Colonel Sir Archibald Christie,
-the commandant, did the corps the honour of confiding to it the
-charge of the magazines within the lines. Repeatedly the guards were
-approached by suspicious persons; and on one occasion private John
-Herkes was fired at by an unseen hand, but the ball missed him and
-perforated the sentry-box. The vigilance of the men and the
-strictness with which they discharged their duty, gained them the
-highest credit.
-
-Captain Edward Matson was appointed brigade-major to the corps on
-the 14th February, vice Major Stanway who resigned; and Captain
-Joshua Jebb was commissioned as adjutant to the establishment at
-Chatham from the same date in the room of Captain Matson.
-
-Colour-sergeant James McLaren was the first soldier of the corps who
-received the gratuity and medal. The distinction was conferred upon
-him in April, and well he merited it, both on account of his
-excellent conduct and his good services at St. Sebastian, Algiers,
-New Orleans, and the Cape of Good Hope. He only survived the receipt
-of his honours a few days.
-
-Barbadoes was visited by a hurricane at midnight on the 11th August,
-and its results far exceeded in magnitude the fearful storms of 1675
-and 1780. The loss of life on this occasion was calculated at 2,500,
-and the wounded at 5,000 persons; while the value of property
-destroyed, exclusive of losses by the government and the shipping,
-was estimated at more than a million and a half of money. But in
-this universal devastation the military suffered but little. The
-company of sappers was quartered in the barracks at the
-parade-ground. The lower part, occupied by the artillery, lost only
-the jalousie windows; while the upper part, where the sappers were
-located, was considerably cracked, the roof uncovered, and several
-of the rafters broken, by the falling of the parapet upon them.
-Still with all this danger no accident happened which affected life
-or limb.[268] At the hospital the consequences were different.
-Strongly built and appearing to defy the most powerful storm, that
-building was blown down, and private Charles Shambrook crushed to
-death in the fall.[269] During the hurricane it is recorded, that
-colour-sergeant Joseph Harris signalized himself at the hospital of
-the 36th regiment by his praiseworthy exertions in rescuing
-sufferers from the ruins; and his skilful and zealous conduct was
-applauded by the officers who assisted him.[270] Corporal Andrew
-Muir of the corps also, at great risk to his life, distinguished
-himself by his activity in every part where his assistance was
-required, and being a very powerful man, was eminently successful in
-relieving his suffering fellow-soldiers of various corps.[271]
-
------
-
-Footnote 268:
-
- ‘Account of the fatal Hurricane at Barbadoes in 1831,’ p. 89.
-
-Footnote 269:
-
- Opposite the General Hospital, a monumental tomb, erected by his
- surviving comrades, marks the spot where the mangled remains of
- poor Shambrook were interred. Ibid., p. 95.
-
-Footnote 270:
-
- Ibid., p. 94.
-
-Footnote 271:
-
- Ibid., p. 97.
-
------
-
-Soon after the hurricane, the ‘Arethusa,’ of Liverpool, a ship of
-350 tons, was blown to pieces by gunpowder in the harbour of
-Barbadoes, by colour-sergeant Harris and a party of the 19th company
-under the direction of Major, now Colonel Sir William Reid. The
-destruction of the ship was effected by a number of successive small
-charges of gunpowder applied to the ship’s bottom as near the keel
-as possible, and fired at high water;[272] and as it has not been
-discovered, in the history of engineering, that the entire
-demolition of a wreck was ever accomplished by these means, it is
-therefore memorable that the royal sappers and miners were the first
-who ever destroyed a sunken wreck by submarine mining.[273]
-
------
-
-Footnote 272:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers, Royal Engineers,’ ii. p. 36. ‘United Service
- Journal,’ iii. 1838, p. 37.
-
-Footnote 273:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii. 1839, p. 183, 184.
-
------
-
-On the 7th October, the House of Lords threw out the Reform Bill,
-and as consequent riots had occurred in various parts of the
-country, it was expected that an attack would be made on the Tower
-of London. To assist in repelling any attempt upon that fortress,
-two sergeants and thirty-three rank and file under the command of
-Lieutenant John Williams, R.E., were sent there on the 8th November,
-but after being under arms for a week, they returned to Woolwich,
-without any necessity arising for the employment of their services.
-
-Late in December, second-corporal Edward Deane and private James
-Andrews, accompanied Captain C. Grierson to Western Africa, where
-they were employed in surveying the coast and the town of Bathurst.
-On this duty they were found particularly useful, and rejoined at
-Woolwich in June, 1832.
-
-The Rideau Canal, began in 1827, was finished in the winter of 1831,
-connecting the trade and commerce of the two provinces of Canada, on
-which, by means of locks and dams, vessels are raised to a summit
-level of 283 feet in eighty-four miles, and again descend 165 feet
-in forty-three miles.[274] The object of the undertaking was, in the
-event of a war with the United States, to have a secure water
-communication open between the lakes and Lower Canada.[275] Two
-companies of the corps were employed on this service under the
-command of Lieut.-Colonel By of the engineers, whose name was given
-to the town which rose up in the wild spot selected for the
-headquarters. The earliest hut in Bytown, now a flourishing
-settlement, was built by the sappers. For the first summer they were
-encamped on a height near the Ottawa, but before the winter set in
-were removed into temporary barracks erected by themselves. Most of
-the work of the canal was executed by contract, but in some parts of
-the line where the engineering difficulties were great, sapper
-labour was chiefly resorted to—the non-commissioned officers acting
-as foremen of trades and overseers. Parties were detached during the
-progress of the canal to Merrick’s Mills, Isthmus of Mud Lake, Upper
-Narrows, rivers Tay and Richmond, Jones' Falls, Claffey’s Mills,
-Newborough, and Isthmus of Rideau Lake.
-
-Footnote 274:
-
- Speech of Major Selwyn, R.E. ‘Graham’s Town Journal,’ 1842.
-
-Footnote 275:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers, Royal Engineers,’ v. p. 157.
-
------
-
-Among the chief services rendered by the companies it is recorded,
-that a party levelled and cleared the channel of the river between
-Black Rapids and the head of Long Island. Over the canal they built
-a bridge connecting upper and lower Bytown, which still bears the
-designation of the “Sappers' bridge.” In the construction of the
-first eight locks at the Ottawa, the companies participated to an
-important extent, and Sir Henry Hardinge, in his evidence before the
-Select Committee in March, 1828, alluded to their employment at some
-of the most difficult parts of the work towards the Ottawa.[276] No
-less difficult was the work executed by them at Hog’s bank. The dam
-there had been commenced by the contractor, but he ultimately
-abandoned the undertaking. Sixty men of the corps were withdrawn
-from the Ottawa to recommence it, and, with some hundred labourers,
-were employed at the dam all the winter of 1828 and 1829. Before the
-breaking up of the frost, the masonry was nearly completed with a
-base of 25 feet; but on the 6th April, 1829, the water found its way
-through the frozen earth, and making a breach in the dam, carried
-away everything opposed to it. This was the second failure. Still a
-third time it was attempted, and under the superintendence of
-Captain Victor of the royal engineers, a strong framework of timber
-was formed in front of the breach, supported and strengthened by
-enormous masses of clay, stone, and gravel, with a base of 250 feet,
-which successfully overcame the difficulty; and the dam, in 1837,
-was the most substantial work on the whole line of canal.[277]
-
------
-
-Footnote 276:
-
- ‘Select Report Ordnance Est.,’ printed 12th June, 1828, p. 82.
-
-Footnote 277:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers, Royal Engineers,’ i. p. 86.
-
------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners Plate XIV.
- UNIFORM 1832 Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-On the completion of the work, which cost upwards of a million of
-money, the two companies were disbanded in December. Their united
-strength on leaving England was 160, and the casualties during their
-period of service at the canal were as follows:—
-
- Deserted 35 Of whom two were apprehended and
- transported.
- Transported 1
- Died 16
- Killed 5 By blasting rock, either in the
- quarries or the canal.
- Drowned 1
- 71 Thirty-seven at the Isthmus of Rideau
- Discharged Lake, and thirty-four at
- Bytown.[278]
- Invalids, and remnant of }
- companies returned to } 31
- England } ___
- Total 160
-
------
-
-Footnote 278:
-
- Most of these men received 100 acres of land each as a reward for
- their services and good conduct, and several were provided with
- appointments on the canal.
-
------
-
-By the reduction of these companies the establishment of the corps
-fell from 1,349 to 1,187 of all ranks.
-
-A material alteration was made in the clothing this year by changing
-the colour of the coatee from scarlet to the infantry red, and the
-style and decoration of the dress were also modified, to correspond
-with the form of lacing adopted generally in the line.—See Plate
-XIV.
-
-The coatee of the bugle-major remained in all respects the same as
-before. The buglers also retained the scarlet, but the style of
-wearing the lace accorded with that of the privates. For the working
-dress, a round jacket with bell buttons bearing the corps device,
-was established, instead of the jacket with short skirts. Of both
-uniform and working trousers, the colour was changed from light blue
-to dark Oxford mixture; but the uniform trousers as formerly, were
-much finer than the working ones. The red stripe down the outer seam
-was two inches broad on the former, and half an inch wide on the
-latter. Laced boots were also introduced this year in place of the
-short Wellingtons, issued for the first time in 1825. The leather
-stock hitherto supplied by the public, was now made an article of
-necessaries and provided at the cost of the soldier.
-
-A detachment of seven masons and bricklayers under corporal John
-Reed, embarked for the Mauritius on the 25th May and arrived there
-in the ‘Arab,’ transport, on the 13th November. This was the first
-party of the corps that had ever landed at the Isle of France. On
-board ship, great irregularity prevailed among the troops; but
-corporal Reed’s party behaved in so exemplary a manner, that the
-report of their creditable conduct was made the subject of a general
-order to the corps.[279] The detachment was sent to the island at
-the recommendation of Lieutenant-Colonel Fyers of the royal
-engineers, for the purpose of leading and instructing the native
-artificers, and were quartered in some old slave huts at the Caudon.
-The first work undertaken by the sappers was the tower at Black
-River. While this was in progress, a reinforcement of one
-colour-sergeant, and twenty-two rank and file, under the command of
-Captain C. Grierson, R.E., landed from the ‘Royal George,’
-freightship on the 22nd January, 1833, and afterwards assisted in
-the works at Black River, and also in the erection of two martello
-towers at Grand River. When these were completed, the services of
-the entire detachment were chiefly confined to the building of the
-citadel on the Petite Montagne.
-
------
-
-Footnote 279:
-
- Corporal Reed, when returning home an invalid from the Mauritius,
- was wrecked on the 17th July, 1836, in the barque ‘Doncaster,’ on
- the reef L’Agulhas, 70 miles S.E. of the Cape of Good Hope, and
- perished with his wife and family of four children.
-
------
-
-In May six rank and file were detached from Plymouth to Pendennis
-Castle. In June of the next year the party was increased to two
-sergeants and eighteen rank and file, who were employed there until
-August in repairing the barracks and strengthening the ramparts.
-
-
-
-
- 1833-1836.
-
-Inspection at Chatham by Lord Hill—Pontoon experiments—Withdrawal
- of companies from the ports—Reduction of the corps, and
- reorganization of the companies—Recall of companies from
- abroad—Purfleet—Trigonometrical survey of west coast of
- England—Draft to the Cape—Review at Chatham by Lord Hill—Motto to
- the corps—Reinforcement to the Mauritius—Inspection at Woolwich by
- Sir Frederick Mulcaster—Mortality from cholera; services of
- corporals Hopkins and Ritchley—Entertainment to the detachment at
- the Mauritius by Sir William Nicolay—Triangulation of the
- west coast of Scotland—Kaffir war—Appointments of ten
- foremen of works—Death of Quartermaster Galloway—Succeeded
- by sergeant-major Hilton—Sergeant Forbes—Notice of his
- father—Lieutenant Dashwood—Euphrates expedition—Labours of
- the party—Sergeant Sim—Generosity of Colonel Chesney,
- R.A.—Additional smiths to the expedition—Loss of the ‘Tigris’
- steamer—Descent of the Euphrates—Sappers with the expedition
- employed as engineers—Corporal Greenhill—Approbation of
- the services of the party—Triangulation of west coast of
- Scotland—Addiscombe—Expedition to Spain—Character of the
- detachment that accompanied it—Passages; action in front of San
- Sebastian—Reinforcement to Spain—Final trial of Pontoons—Mission
- to Constantinople.
-
-
-The corps at Chatham, consisting of two companies and a detachment,
-were inspected by Lord Hill, the Commander-in-Chief, on the 16th
-August, 1833, and his Lordship was pleased to express his
-approbation of their efficiency and appearance.
-
-On the 20th of the same month, some experimental practice was
-carried on with Major Blanshard’s cylindrical pontoons on the
-canal in the royal arsenal at Woolwich, in the presence of
-Lieutenant-General Sir James Kempt, the Master-General. In these
-trials two non-commissioned officers and twenty-four privates from
-Chatham assisted, and their activity and energy elicited the
-thanks of the inventor and the commendation of the Master-General.
-
-On the recommendation of a committee appointed by the
-Master-General, the company at Plymouth with the detachment at
-Pendennis, was removed to Woolwich on the 18th August, 1833, and the
-company at Portsmouth was also transferred to head-quarters on the
-29th of the same month. For nearly fifty years a company had been
-quartered at each of those ports, and their withdrawal was caused by
-some approaching alterations in the construction and distribution of
-the corps.
-
-The expediency of reducing it, and remodelling the organization of
-the companies, had been under consideration for months; and it was
-believed that even after providing an adequate establishment of
-sappers and miners proportionate to the strength of the infantry,
-the numbers of the corps might be so diminished as to lessen its
-expense 5,000_l._ annually. Major-General Pilkington, the
-Inspector-General of Fortifications, laid down the rule that 100
-sappers was a fair number to be attached to 4,000 infantry, subject,
-however, to augmentation in particular cases, according to the
-nature of the country in which operations might be carried on. On
-these data, Sir James Kempt ordered, on the 30th August, 1833, the
-companies of the corps to be compressed from seventeen into twelve,
-and the establishment to be reduced from 1,187 to 1,070 of all
-ranks.
-
-Under the same order, the eight general service and three survey
-companies were composed of the following ranks and numbers:—
-
- Colour- Ser- Cor- 2nd Bugl. Priv. Total. General
- sergeant. geants. porals. corp. Total.
- 1 2 3 3 2 80 91 for 11 Comps.=
- 1,001
- The Corfu Comp- }
- any, paid by }
- the Ionian Gov- }
- ernment, was } 1 2 3 3 2 51 62 62
- unchanged in }
- its establish- }
- ment, and }
- consisted of } _____
- 1,063
- The Staff, including Brigade-major, Adjutant, Quartermaster, }
- 2 Sergeant-majors, 1 Quartermaster-sergeant,[280] and } 7
- 1 Bugle-major, amounted to }
- _____
- Making of all ranks a total of 1,070
- =====
-
------
-
-Footnote 280:
-
- One quartermaster-sergeant was now reduced, and Francis Allen, who
- held the rank for twenty-two years, was discharged in October,
- 1833, and pensioned at 2_s._ 8½_d._ a-day, having completed a
- service of more than forty years. One of his sons, formerly in the
- corps, is foreman of works at Alderney, and another, until
- recently, was clerk of works in the royal engineer department,
- London district.
-
------
-
-The distribution of the companies was fixed as follows:—
-
- Companies.
- Woolwich 3
- Chatham 1
- Survey 3
- Gibraltar 1
- Corfu 1
- Bermuda 1
- Halifax 1
- Cape of Good Hope ½
- Mauritius ½
- Mauritius ½
- ____
- Total 12
- ====
-
-The companies at Barbadoes and Quebec, and the second companies at
-Gibraltar and Bermuda, were recalled and incorporated with the
-newly-constructed companies, or reduced as the circumstances of the
-service required. The reduction was a progressive measure, and not
-finally effected till the 6th November, 1834.
-
-A party of six rank and file was sent in January to Purfleet; and a
-like number continued for more than twenty years to be employed
-there in carrying on the current repairs to the departmental
-property with advantage to the public service.
-
-In May, sergeant George Derbyshire and five rank and file were
-detached under Captain Henderson, of the engineers, on the
-trigonometrical survey of the west coast of England. The operations
-embraced the triangulation of the Lancashire and Cumberland coasts
-with the Isle of Man, and part of the coast of Scotland. The
-sergeant and one of the privates were employed as observers; the
-remainder assisted in the erection of objects for observation,
-stages, &c., and attended to the duties of the camp. The party
-quitted the mountains in October and rejoined their several
-companies.
-
-In the same month, at the Cape of Good Hope, the detachment was
-augmented to half a company of forty-eight of all ranks. The
-necessity for this addition had been repeatedly represented by the
-commanding royal engineer at the station. Scarcely a bricklayer or
-mason could be found in the colony who had served an apprenticeship;
-and those who professed these trades were not only unskilful and
-indolent, but generally drunken and dissipated. It therefore became
-an object of much importance to increase the sappers at the Cape to
-a number sufficient to meet the exigencies of the service.
-
-On the 3rd June a company and detachment of the corps were reviewed
-at Chatham with the troops in garrison by Lord Hill, who expressed
-his approbation of the soldier-like appearance and effective state
-of the sappers.
-
-His Majesty, in July, 1832, ordered the motto “Ubique quo fas et
-gloria ducunt” to be borne on the appointments of the corps, in
-addition to the Royal Arms and Supporters; and this year the
-cap-plates and breast-plates were made to accord with the King’s
-command. The cap-lines or cords and tassels issued in 1830 were
-abolished this year, and the staff-sergeants were permitted to wear,
-instead of the forage-cap, a silk oilskin chaco of the same size and
-shape as the regimental chaco.
-
-In July a reinforcement of fifteen rank and file landed at the
-Mauritius from the ‘Valleyfield’ freightship, increasing the
-detachment to a half company of forty-five strong.
-
-On the 16th August the three companies and detachment at Woolwich
-were inspected by Major-General Sir Frederic Mulcaster, the
-Inspector-General of Fortifications, and the perfect satisfaction he
-felt at what he witnessed was made the subject of a general order to
-the corps.
-
-For four years the cholera had been prevalent in many parts of Great
-Britain and the colonies, but owing to the admirable precautions
-adopted, the disease was not only less formidable, but much less
-fatal among the military than the civil population. In the royal
-sappers and miners the numbers seized with the malady were
-comparatively insignificant; and during this period, though the
-disease had visited most of the stations where companies of the
-corps were quartered, the fatal cases only amounted to sixteen men,
-five women, and four children. Those cases occurred at the following
-stations:—
-
- Serg. Priv. Wom. Child.
- Quebec, in July and September, 1832 .. .. ..
- Portsmouth, August, 1833 .. 1 1 2
- Gibraltar, July, 1834 1 3 3 3
- Halifax, N.S., in August and September, 1834. .. 7 .. ..
-
-At Portsmouth ten men were admitted into hospital with the disease.
-The company was consequently removed to Southsea Castle and the
-cholera disappeared. At Gibraltar thirty-one men were admitted, and
-the deaths were few in proportion to the loss of some regiments in
-garrison, the 50th regiment having lost nearly fifty men. Of the
-military at the fortress about 140 died of cholera, but the
-civilians counted 470 fatal cases. During the raging of the disease,
-corporal John Hopkins and lance-corporal William Ritchley were
-conspicuous for their zeal and attention to the sick. Their duties
-were attended with considerable personal risk; and to the valuable
-assistance they rendered to the men in the early stages of the
-attack, both by their cheerful exertions and judgment, is attributed
-the rapid recovery of many of those who were sent to the hospital.
-Corporal Hopkins was promoted to the rank of sergeant in
-consequence. At Halifax, Dr. M‘Donald of the ordnance medical
-department, gained much credit for his indefatigable attention to
-his numerous patients, twenty-six of whom recovered under his
-skilful treatment; and his great success in so many cases was lauded
-both by the medical chief of his own department, and the
-Master-General.
-
-In December the foundation stone of the citadel of La Petite
-Montagne, Mauritius, was laid by Major-General Sir William Nicolay,
-the governor of the colony, with all the parade and ceremony usual
-on such occasions. The company was present, and private William
-Reynolds, the most skilful mason in the detachment, had the honour
-of assisting his Excellency in the deposition of the stone. In the
-evening of the same day to commemorate the event, the detachment
-with their wives and families partook of a sumptuous supper
-generously furnished by his Excellency.
-
-From June to October, sergeant George Darbyshire and five men were
-employed under Captain Henderson, R.E., in the triangulation of the
-west coast of Scotland, and were encamped during the operations on
-the mountains.
-
-At the Cape of Good Hope the incursions of the Kaffirs brought on a
-desultory war this year, and the detachment of the corps in the
-colony was scattered in small parties over the frontier. Though much
-employed with the advanced forces in superintending the construction
-of redoubts and other indispensable defensive works, they were never
-called upon to take any particular part in attacking the enemy. The
-marching to which they were subjected, through a country of bush and
-mountain, was severe, and exposed under canvas or in bivouac to
-every variation of the climate, they shared all the trials and
-sufferings incident to the troops.
-
-Sir Hussey Vivian, the Master-General, entertained so favourable an
-opinion of the corps, that he felt it right, on the 6th October, to
-order increased encouragement to be given to non-commissioned
-officers of proper attainments and merits, by appointing them
-occasionally to be foremen of works in the royal engineer
-department. The first appointed under this order was sergeant Henry
-French,[281] and at distant intervals the following non-commissioned
-officers were promoted to that rank—viz., sergeants Nicolas
-Markey,[282] William Spry,[283] John Wood,[284] William Jago,[285]
-Hugh Munro,[286] John Hopkins,[287] second-corporal Daniel
-Rock,[288] sergeant William Sargent,[289] and quarter-master
-sergeant Noah Deary.[290]
-
------
-
-Footnote 281:
-
- Had served upwards of twenty-two years in the corps; and was a
- shrewd man and a skilful carpenter and overseer. He was appointed
- in October, 1836, to Guernsey, where he died in February, 1854.
- His eldest son, a very promising young man, is now foreman of
- works in the department at the Tower.
-
-Footnote 282:
-
- Joined the corps a lad, and by perseverance made himself competent
- for higher duty. To smartness in person he united much activity of
- body, and in September, 1843, was advanced to the civil branch,
- first to Corfu and then to Gibraltar; where, in the excess of his
- zeal on the works, he fell from his horse by a stroke of the sun,
- and sustained an injury in the head. He is now at Dublin, a
- lunatic, passing away his life on a retirement of 32_l._ a-year.
- He served seventeen years in the sappers.
-
-Footnote 283:
-
- Was an excellent mason and very efficient as a foreman. He had
- been on a mission to Constantinople, and received from Sultan
- Mahmoud II. a gold medal for his services. After a service of
- twenty-one years in the corps, he was, in June, 1844, appointed to
- Gibraltar, where he fell into habits of excessive intemperance and
- committed suicide in 1852.
-
-Footnote 284:
-
- As master mason at Vido he constructed the works with remarkable
- ability. He also superintended the erection of the half-moon
- battery in the citadel and the defensive buildings at Fort Neuf.
- Colonel Hassard said, on his leaving, that he hardly expected a
- man of equal talent to fill his place: and it may be observed that
- he could speak with fluency the different languages of the civil
- workmen at Corfu. By Colonel Hassard he was recommended to visit
- Rome and other places for artistic improvement, but the usages of
- the service did not permit the concession of this favour. In 1837
- he finished the erection of the Longona cistern at Paxo, which
- relieved the inhabitants from the necessity of taking long
- journeys to procure supplies. The work was very creditable to him,
- and gained for him the eulogy and good will of the whole island.
- To commemorate its completion a procession of the functionaries
- and _élite_ of Paxo took place, and Wood, the great object of
- attraction, was warmly greeted by the grateful populace. He became
- foreman of works in November, 1844, first at Cephalonia, and next
- at Corfu. His service in the corps was over twenty-three years.
-
-Footnote 285:
-
- He gained his promotion very rapidly, for he was in all respects a
- very clever artificer and foreman. In the works of the department
- at Woolwich he was found a great acquisition, and after serving
- for a few years at Bermuda, where his usefulness was greatly
- appreciated, he was discharged in May, 1845, and appointed to
- Canada. There he passed seven years, and is now serving at
- Gibraltar.
-
-Footnote 286:
-
- A good mason, and bore an unblameable character. After twenty
- years' service, chiefly at Halifax and Corfu, he was appointed to
- Malta in April, 1847, where he is still serving with efficiency
- and credit.
-
-Footnote 287:
-
- When he joined the corps a lad, in 1826, he could scarcely write,
- but by diligent application he soon exhibited talents which in
- after years caused him to be selected for important duties.
- Promotion he received rapidly, and for his intelligence and
- ingenuity at Sandhurst in 1839 he was honourably noticed in the
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii. 1839, p. 420. For many years he
- served at Gibraltar and the Cape of Good Hope, became a fair
- draftsman and architect, and in July, 1848, after a service of
- twenty-two years, was appointed foreman of works, first at the
- Cape, and then at Woolwich. He is now clerk of works at
- Shoeburyness.
-
-Footnote 288:
-
- Was a superior mason, and trained before enlistment as an
- overseer. Most of his military service—nineteen years—was spent on
- the surveys of Great Britain and Ireland, in which he had made
- himself so proficient a surveyor and mathematician, that he was
- one of three non-commissioned officers sent to the royal
- observatory at Greenwich to receive instructions in the mode of
- making astronomical observations. This was with the view to his
- employment on the boundary survey in America, in which he
- afterwards served for a season with approbation. Colonel Estcourt
- wrote of him,—“He is intelligent, well educated, and efficient for
- almost any duty.” These acquirements, coupled with his good
- conduct, gained for him the vacant foremancy at Zante, in
- September, 1848; but, it must be added, he commenced the duty in
- dishonour by unwarrantably drawing a bill on the Assistant
- Adjutant-General of the royal engineers, and then having run a
- career of dissipation that nothing could check, was justly
- dismissed in disgrace in July, 1849.
-
-Footnote 289:
-
- Joined the corps from the military asylum at Chelsea. Until the
- Russian war broke out he had not been noticed for any particular
- aptitude or efficiency. When at Constantinople, thrown by
- circumstances into boundless difficulties consequent on the
- frightful pressure for hospital accommodation, his services were
- invaluable. “I have no hesitation,” wrote Captain E. C. A. Gordon,
- 20th August, 1855, “in saying, that I believe the success of the
- works that were executed was owing, in a great measure, to his
- excessive and untiring zeal and activity.” This recommendation was
- the occasion of his appointment at Scutari, from whence, after the
- return of peace, he was removed to the engineer department at
- Devonport.
-
-Footnote 290:
-
- Entered the corps a boy from Chelsea school. With a fair share of
- common sense, he made the best of his chances as a military
- foreman at the Cape of Good Hope, where he had served for many
- years. The recollection of his usefulness at Natal, and in other
- districts of the frontier, led to his being appointed civil
- foreman of works in that colony. In 1842, Deary fought in the
- actions against the insurgent Boers at Natal.
-
------
-
-Quartermaster James Galloway died on the 9th November at Wellesley
-House, Shooters' Hill, after an active service of forty-five years,
-which he performed with a faithfulness amounting to devotion. Few
-officers in the army in passing from the ranks to a commission,
-gained higher respect than he did, and in his death few were more
-regretted or more honoured.
-
-Sergeant-major James Hilton succeeded to the vacancy—a distinction
-he merited by his long services, uniform zeal, and soldier-like
-qualities. He was presented on the occasion by the officers of royal
-engineers at Woolwich with a sword, and a grant was made to him of
-20_l._ to assist him in his outfit.
-
-Sergeant James Forbes was promoted to be sergeant-major by Sir
-Hussey Vivian as a reward for his services. For six years he had
-been employed, during every spring and autumn, at the royal military
-college at Sandhurst, in the instruction of the gentlemen cadets,
-and returned to his corps on every occasion with fresh claims to
-approbation. Every season at the college was marked by his effecting
-some improvement in the course and in rendering some new and
-essential service to the institution. Among many minor subjects
-necessary to complete the experimental course, he introduced the use
-of various mechanical expedients in connexion with purposes of
-military science, and the construction of military bridges of
-different kinds, from the rudest adaptations of rough timber and
-wicker work to the finished formation of a pontoon bridge.[291]
-Observing his indefatigable exertions in carrying out his
-professional duties at the institution, Sir George Scovell, the
-Lieutenant-Governor, was induced to say, that “sergeant Forbes had
-laid the college under great obligations to himself and the
-admirable corps to which he belonged;” and in acknowledgment of that
-obligation, Sir Edward Paget, the Governor, presented him with a
-valuable case of drawing instruments. Subsequently he had the high
-honour of being admitted to an audience with his Majesty, William
-IV.;[292] in which interview the King graciously commended his
-conduct, ability, and zeal. Soon afterwards the Master-General, who
-frequently wrote in eulogistic terms of his services, promoted him
-from the rank of sergeant to be sergeant-major.[293]
-
------
-
-Footnote 291:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii. 1834, p. 561, and ii. 1835, p. 277,
- 278.
-
-Footnote 292:
-
- Forbes’s Pamphlet, ‘National Defences,’ 1852.
-
-Footnote 293:
-
- The father of the sergeant-major, who also held that rank in the
- corps, died of fever at Walcheren in 1809, and, as soon as his son
- was old enough, he was enlisted into the sappers. His age on
- joining was only eight years! For a few years he was stationed at
- Dover, but the chief of his career was passed at Chatham, where,
- under Sir Charles Pasley, he received that instruction in field
- fortification and drawing which made his services at Sandhurst so
- important and successful. Here it should also be noticed that he
- kept his detachments in the best order; and by their steadiness
- and willing exertions, they earned for themselves a character
- which has greatly raised the corps in public estimation.
-
------
-
-In December, Lieutenant Robert Dashwood, R.E., was appointed
-acting-adjutant at head quarters, to assist the brigade-major in the
-office and parade duties. This was the first appointment of the kind
-in the corps at Woolwich. Smart, strict in discipline, and exact in
-the performance of duty, he promised to advance the sappers to the
-high development attained in well-disciplined regiments, but his
-career of usefulness was suddenly cut short by disease of the heart,
-of which he died on the 21st September, 1839.[294]
-
------
-
-Footnote 294:
-
- The names of the succeeding acting-adjutants at Woolwich will be
- found in the Appendix III.
-
------
-
-In the summer of 1834 an expedition under the command of Colonel
-Chesney was projected, to ascertain the practicability of the
-Euphrates for opening a route by steam navigation to India. A
-detachment of the royal artillery and five men of the corps were
-appointed to it. One, sergeant Thomas Sim, was a surveyor, and the
-rest were smiths, and their qualifications in steam machinery,
-surveying, and drawing, had particular reference to the wants of the
-enterprise. When selected their names were submitted to the
-King.[295] For their military dress was substituted a plain blue
-suit, consisting of a slouched cap, frock coat with gilt buttons,
-and loose trousers, as more suitable to the climate of the East. The
-beard and moustache after the oriental fashion were also worn.
-
------
-
-Footnote 295:
-
- Chesney’s ‘Expedition to the Euphrates,’ Pref. x.
-
------
-
-In September the party was sent to the factory of Messrs. Laird and
-Co., at Birkenhead; and after receiving instructions in riveting and
-the management of steam engines, sailed on the 10th February, 1835,
-for Syria. Three of the party only landed; the other two having, by
-some mismanagement, returned to England from Malta. From the mouth
-of the Orontes to Bir, a distance of 145 miles, the three sappers,
-as well as the other soldiers and seamen, were employed in
-transporting the materials for the construction and armament of two
-steamers, across a country of varied and difficult features,
-intersected by a lake and two rapid rivers. Boilers of great weight
-were forced up hills, inch by inch, by means of screw-jacks; and
-through the unflagging exertions of officers and men, and their
-patient endurance of suffering and fatigue, was accomplished “one of
-the most gigantic operations of modern times.”[296]
-
------
-
-Footnote 296:
-
- Chesney’s ‘Observations on Fire-arms,’ p. 197.
-
------
-
-While these arduous labours were in operation, two of the three
-sappers died—sergeant Sim and lance-corporal Samuel Gidens. For the
-most part, the sergeant had been employed with Lieutenant Murphy,
-R.E., or alone, in surveying the country from Latakia to the Gulf of
-Scanderoon; and in which, from his previous knowledge and
-experience, he was found of great use; but while prosecuting this
-duty, he frequently slept on the sands or in open boats, and thus
-contracted a disease no skill could eradicate. When surveying on
-Beilan mountain he suffered much from the keen and penetrating wind
-to which he was exposed, and was removed to Antioch for the benefit
-of his health. A slight improvement urged him to the field again;
-but at Suedia, being thrown from a horse and much injured, he was
-again sent in a litter to Antioch, where he breathed his last on the
-19th September, 1835.
-
-The corporal died at Fort William on the 3rd August. Up to the date
-of his illness he worked most diligently; and to mark the sense
-entertained of his services, a gratuity of 100l. was granted by the
-Treasury to his bereaved family on the recommendation of Colonel
-Chesney, to whose honour it should be recorded that out of his own
-purse, he liberally supported the widow and her children, until the
-award was made by the Government.
-
-Feeling the want of the two smiths who had been sent home from
-Malta, Colonel Chesney applied to have them re-attached to the
-expedition. His wish was at once acceded to, and with them sailed
-two other privates, on the 3rd January, 1836, for Syria. Arriving at
-Malta, they were passed on with all dispatch in the ‘Columbia’ sloop
-of war, and reached Antioch late in February, in time to take part
-in the final preparations for floating the steamers. This
-reinforcement of “promising men, brought the party,” so the Colonel
-writes, “to efficiency once more,” and on the 16th March the descent
-of the river was commenced. There were now five sappers with the
-expedition—one surveyor, and four blacksmiths and millwrights,
-including corporal William Black, all valuable as artificers and
-engineers. Three were allotted to the ‘Euphrates’ steamer, and two
-to the ‘Tigris.’ Civil engineers were also attached to each vessel,
-to whom the sapper smiths acted as subordinates, and were styled
-assistant engineers.
-
-On the 21st May a calamity occurred which deprived the expedition of
-nearly one half of its force. The steamers were descending the river
-with success, when they were overtaken by a hurricane of
-indescribable violence which placed both vessels in imminent peril.
-The storm raged only eight minutes, but during those fearful moments
-the ‘Tigris,’ caught up in its furious vortex, was engulfed with
-twenty of its officers and men. Corporal Benjamin Fisher and private
-Archibald McDonald of the sappers were on board: the former was
-dashed on shore and saved, the latter perished; but his comrades had
-the satisfaction of recovering and interring his remains on the
-banks of the stream, near Anna.
-
-The descent of the “Great River” was accomplished by reaching its
-junction with the ‘Tigris’ at Kurnah, on the 18th June, 1836, and
-seventy-two guns having been fired the next day in honour of His
-Majesty William IV., the steamer crossed the Persian Gulf to
-Bushire, to meet expected supplies from Bombay. After three months'
-delay at the former port refitting the vessel and completing the
-engines with the assistance of the sappers, and a fresh crew having
-been obtained from the Indian navy, the steamer re-crossed the
-Persian Gulf, and the ascent of the river commenced.
-
-The chief engineer having died the first day of the ascent, the
-engines were entrusted to the sole management of corporal Fisher,
-who continued to perform this duty most satisfactorily up to the
-termination of the service. Corporal Black was the senior
-non-commissioned officer of the party, but his health had previously
-become so much impaired that he was sent from Bussora to Bombay for
-its recovery. Of this non-commissioned officer Colonel Chesney
-wrote, that “both as a soldier and a man, in every way, he does
-credit to his corps.”
-
-With the highest testimonials the party rejoined the corps at
-Woolwich in May, 1837.[297] As engineers they had been found of the
-greatest service to the expedition; and for the skilfulness and
-efficiency with which the engines were worked, the Government
-divided the engineers' pay among them for the period they were so
-employed in the following proportions:—corporal Black 13_l._;
-lance-corporal B. Fisher 19_l._; lance-corporal T. Edrington 21_l._
-
------
-
-Footnote 297:
-
- On the completion of the service, the expedition was favoured with
- a few days' location at Damascus, where the party removed their
- beards and moustaches, and for the first time since the
- commencement of the enterprise, had the advantage of attending
- church for religious worship.
-
------
-
-Lance-corporal William Greenhill was attached to Lieutenant
-Murphy, R.E., and his duties were those which arose out of
-surveying and astronomy. In the whole of the survey of the two
-rivers and the countries adjacent to their banks, he took an
-important part, and after the death of that officer was employed
-on the line of levels between the two rivers, with reference to a
-canal of intercommunication for commercial purposes. Captain
-Estcourt, 43rd regiment, the second in command, in writing of this
-non-commissioned officer, says: “A more willing, honest, active
-man does not exist, and he is sober and trustworthy in the highest
-degree.” “All,” writes the same officer, “are valuable men, and
-capable of rendering important services wherever they may be
-employed.”
-
-The approbation of the commissioners for the affairs of India was
-accompanied with the following gratuities:—to corporal Black 39_l._,
-and to each of the other three non-commissioned officers 19_l._
-10_s._; and further, Sir Hussey Vivian, the Master-General ordered
-the promotion of corporal Black to the rank of sergeant,
-second-corporal Fisher to corporal;[298] and lance-corporal William
-Greenhill to be second-corporal.[299]
-
-In May the operations for the triangulation of the west coast of
-Scotland were resumed, for the third time, under Captain Henderson,
-R.E., by six non-commissioned officers and men of the corps, who
-were continued on the service till the early winter. They then
-returned to Woolwich with a good character for activity and
-exertion.
-
------
-
-Footnote 298:
-
- Pensioned in May, 1843, and appointed assistant lighthouse keeper
- at Europa Point, Gibraltar, under the Trinity Board of London.
-
------
-
-Footnote 299:
-
- Greenhill was an intelligent man, pleasantly eccentric, and fond
- of antiquities. While with the expedition he made a collection of
- silver coins of remote times, which, with laudable feelings of
- attachment to his native place, he presented to the Perth Museum.
- His hair was as white as silver, but his beard, full and flowing,
- was as black as ebony. To the Arabs he was quite a phenomenon, but
- the singularity which made him so, did not save him, on one
- occasion, from being rudely seized by a horde of banditti, and
- plundered, with almost fabulous dexterity, of the gilt buttons on
- his frock coat. They had nearly finished their work, when
- Greenhill tore himself from their grasp, but finding that a button
- still remained on the cuff, he audaciously pulled off the frock
- and threw it at them. Suspecting that their work was incomplete
- the Arabs pounced on the coat, and tearing off the remaining
- button scampered away to the hills again. When, some years later,
- the Niger expedition was forming, Greenhill volunteered to
- accompany it. He had a notion that the service would be one of
- suffering and vicissitude, and the better to inure himself to its
- contemplated hardships he submitted his body to rigorous
- experiments of exposure and self-denial, which, inducing
- erysipelas, caused his premature decease in October, 1840.
-
------
-
-At the request of the court of Directors of the East India Company,
-seven rank and file were employed at the seminary at Addiscombe, in
-throwing up field-works for the instruction of the gentlemen cadets,
-during the months of August, September, and October. The corporal in
-charge received 2_s._ a-day working pay, and the privates 1_s._
-a-day, each. For the two succeeding terms, a similar party was
-provided for the seminary, and on each occasion received much credit
-for its services. After the third term it was found desirable to
-discontinue the detachment, and the Addiscombe authorities drew the
-means of instruction from their own resources.
-
-By an order from Lord Palmerston, Lieutenant Edward Vicars, R.E.,
-and one sergeant and twelve rank and file, embarked at Woolwich on
-the 10th July, in the ‘Pluto,’ steamer, and landed at San Sebastian
-on the 19th, taking with them a limited supply of field equipment
-and engineer stores. The party was attached to the royal marines,
-with the British naval forces under the command of Lord John Hay,
-and was intended to take part in any operations deemed necessary to
-defend the Queen of Spain against the adherents of Don Carlos. All
-the men were volunteers, fully capable of constructing field-works
-and military bridges, and qualified, also to direct and take charge
-of working parties.
-
-The major part of the detachment were men of notoriously bad
-character, appointed to the service to afford them a chance of
-reclaiming themselves; but their arrival in Spain was soon marked by
-those habits of turbulence and dissipation which rendered them a
-burden at home. Without zeal, spirit, or subordination, they were
-found almost useless on the works, and to such a pitch was their
-misconduct carried, that Lieutenant Vicars contemplated dispensing
-with their services as sappers and miners. By the removal, however,
-of a few of the grossest offenders, the punishment of others by the
-navy, and the infusion of a better class of men among them from
-England, the inevitable disgrace of the corps was prevented; and
-eventually, with few trifling exceptions, the detachment established
-a character for discipline, good conduct, and usefulness.
-
-On landing, the party was removed to the eastern heights of Passages
-to complete works for the protection of the shipping in the harbour.
-Here the royal marines were employed for a time, as also a force of
-about 200 of the auxiliary legion. Late in September, a few of the
-party assisted in throwing up a work for the defence of a bridge
-leading into San Sebastian, and secured the position held by the
-force on the left of Passages. It was now understood that the
-Carlists intended to attack General Evans: a redoubt was forthwith
-constructed on a commanding hill in front of the enemy, and a
-battery for four guns and some breastworks were thrown up on the
-extreme left of the position. The legion furnished a working party
-of 200 men for these operations. On the 1st October, the enemy
-attacked the lines in front of San Sebastian, directing their fire
-principally on the picket-house, near which the battery was
-progressing. Against this battery, also, another battalion was sent,
-and having taken it, the column pressed on to the walls of the
-station; but the party within remained firm, and the Carlists were
-ultimately driven from the contest with the loss of 1,200 in killed
-and wounded. In this action were present four sappers, one of whom
-was wounded.
-
-On the 31st October, the detachment in Spain was increased to
-twenty-five non-commissioned officers and men, by the arrival of
-twelve rank and file from Woolwich, in the ‘Rhadamanthus’ steamer,
-who were at once disposed of between San Sebastian and Passages, and
-assisted in the completion of the fort and barracks at the latter.
-
-Experiments with the pontoons of Colonel Pasley and Major Blanshard,
-took place at Chatham on the 1st July. Sir Hussey Vivian, the
-Master-General, was present. For a few years previously, a portion
-of the summer of every year had been past in practically testing the
-projects of rival competitors for the passage of rivers; but on this
-occasion the trial ended in favour of the cylindrical pontoon of
-Major Blanshard. In all these trials a detachment of the corps was
-employed, and in this, the last experiment, executed under the
-disadvantage of extreme heat, Colonel Pasley warmly praised the
-party for its zeal and activity in working the two bridges.
-
-With the mission to Turkey under the command of Captain du Plat,
-R.E., were embarked on the 15th September, two lance-sergeants of
-the corps on board the ‘Astrea,’ which entered the port of
-Constantinople on the 31st October. One was a surveyor conversant
-with the management of surveying instruments, and the other skilled
-in the details of the duties connected with the system of
-instruction carried out at Chatham. The mission took stores as
-presents to the Sultan. A sergeant of the royal artillery and a
-civil mechanic from the royal arsenal with Lieutenant Knowles, R.A.,
-accompanied it. At the time of its arrival the plague was prevalent,
-and under orders from His Majesty’s ambassador at the Porte, the
-mission passed a few months in the ‘Volage’ and ‘Carysfort,’ lying
-in the Bosphorus. When the plague abated, the presents were conveyed
-to the Sultan—Mahmoud II.; and his Highness as a token of
-satisfaction presented each officer and soldier with a gold medal,
-and the artizan with a gold snuff-box. The non-commissioned officers
-of sappers who had the honour of receiving the distinction, were
-William Spry and William Richardson. Each medal bore a gold clasp,
-upon which was inscribed the name of the recipient and that of the
-Sultan. During their service with the mission each received 1_s._
-6_d._ a-day working pay, and on arrival in England in April, 1838, a
-gratuity of 10_l._
-
-
-
-
- 1837.
-
-Change in the dress—Increase of non-commissioned officers—Services
- of the detachment at Ametza Gaña—Oriamendi—Desierto convent
- on the Nervion—Fuentarabia—Oyarzun—Aindoin—Miscellaneous
- employments of the detachment—Trigonometrical survey west
- coast of Scotland—Inspection at Woolwich by Lord Hill
- and Sir Hussey Vivian—Staff appointments—Labours of sergeant
- Lanyon—Staff-sergeants' accoutrements—Expedition to New
- Holland—Corporal Coles selected as the man Friday of his
- chief—Exploration from High Bluff Point to Hanover Bay;
- difficulties and trials of the trip; great thirst—Exertions
- and critical situation of Coles—His courageous bearing—Touching
- instance of devotion to his chief—Employments of the
- party—Exploration into the interior with Coles and private
- Mustard—Hardships in its prosecution—Threatened attack of the
- natives; return to the camp.
-
-
-This year the colour of the coatee was changed from red to
-scarlet—Plate XV., and the huge Kilmarnock woven cap was superseded
-by a neat superfine blue cloth cap, stiffened, with peak and
-chin-strap. The sergeants were distinguished by black oak-leaf bands
-and gilt ornaments, comprising a grenade, encircled by a laurel
-wreath, and surmounted by a crown and three chevrons. The other
-non-commissioned officers wore chevrons according to their ranks.
-The oil-skin chaco of the staff-sergeants was put aside for a
-forage-cap, with a gold oak-leaf band and gilt ornaments of a crown
-within a laurel-leaf.
-
-By a royal warrant dated 24th April, an increase of one
-sergeant, one corporal, and one second corporal was made to each
-company by reducing five privates per company. Recourse to this
-expedient was necessary on account of the control of the
-companies being much diminished by the several detached duties
-upon which non-commissioned officers were employed, as well as a
-number being always required to take charge of the workshops and
-working parties. The strength of each company was now fixed at 1
-colour-sergeant, 3 sergeants, 4 corporals, 4 second-corporals, 2
-buglers, 75 privates; equal 89; which, for 11 companies, gave an
-establishment of 977. The Corfu company, paid by the Ionian
-government, did not, from its weak numbers, participate in the
-alteration. Its strength, therefore 62, with the 3 officers and
-4 non-commissioned officers of the staff, made the total
-establishment of the corps sanctioned by the warrant reach the
-total of 1,048. The number reduced was 22 privates.
-
-In the early months of the year the detachment in Spain was employed
-on the eastern heights of Passages in superintending the completion
-of the fort and barracks, and also on the island of Santa Clara in
-making platforms and repairing batteries.
-
-On the 10th March, seventeen of the party were present in the attack
-on Ametza Gaña, and were subsequently employed in strengthening the
-redoubt previously occupied by the Carlists on that position.
-
-In the action at Oriamendi on the 15th and 16th March, they also
-served. Ten of the number assisted in levelling the enemy’s parapets
-and destroying their barricades and works. The other seven, under
-Lieutenant Burmester, R.E., did duty with the royal artillery
-commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Colquhoun. Their help, readily
-afforded at a time when it was of much value, enabled a third gun to
-be brought into action; and in cutting fuzes and loading shells,
-&c., they were found but little inferior to experienced
-artillerymen. Lord John Hay complimented Lieutenant Vicars upon the
-good service of this detachment; and the officers of the royal and
-marine artillery were loud in their praises of the exertions of the
-sappers, and of the efficiency of their assistance at the guns. One
-private was wounded.
-
-A brief interval of repose followed, in which the detachment was
-occupied in fortifying the eastern entrance of Passages, also in
-barricading the advanced picket-house near that point, and in
-completing the batteries on Santa Clara. Four men were likewise
-detached to the river Nervion, and, with the crews of the ‘Scylla’
-and ‘Savage,’ restored the works of the Desierto convent which
-protected the communication with Bilbao. On the return of the men,
-the commander of the ‘Savage’ brig spoke most favourably of their
-conduct.
-
-In the operations of the army under Espartero on the 14th May,
-fifteen of the detachment were present and assisted in working the
-guns of the royal artillery. On the 17th they embarked to act in an
-attack on Fuentarabia, and were present at its capitulation on the
-18th May. Here the detachment restored one of the ruined bastions of
-the fortress, and, besides making embrasures for two heavy guns,
-cleared away the debris from other parts of the defences and placed
-them in temporary repair.
-
-At Oyarzun the Carlists were in the habit of creeping up to the town
-and annoying the troops. To prevent this, the hill above was crowned
-with a square redoubt for two guns. Ten of the detachment
-superintended its construction, and the work was executed in so
-excellent a manner, that experienced officers spoke of it with
-unqualified satisfaction. The working party consisted of peasants
-who were skilful in the construction of earth-works, and zealous in
-the use of the spade and pickaxe.
-
-At the solicitation of General O’Donnell of the Spanish service,
-nineteen of the sappers, under the command of Lieutenant Vicars,
-were attached to his force. The party reached Aindoin on the 11th
-September, and were set to work with a company of Gastadores under
-them, on a height on the extreme left of the position. Very rapidly,
-a large hedge surrounding the height was turned into a parapet; and
-in places where it was too high to cut down, loopholes were formed.
-A dense wood that joined the hedge was partly felled, and from its
-ample resources abattis were thrown out in front of the line of
-hedge. For three days the work progressed; at intervals under heavy
-rain; and on the 13th September a formidable work of more than half
-a mile in length was ready to obstruct the advance of the enemy. At
-daylight on the 14th the Carlists opened fire on Aindoin, and the
-first shot went through the house where the sappers were quartered.
-At once they were withdrawn to the church, and ultimately removed to
-a circular fort to attend to orders either from Lord John Hay or
-General O’Donnell. Scarcely had they commenced the movement before
-the enemy approached the church with irresistible impetuosity, and
-drove the forces of O’Donnell from the town with signal disaster.
-The escape of the detachment of sappers was almost miraculous; a few
-moments later would have thrown them wholly into the hands of the
-Carlists.
-
-During the later months of the year the detachment repaired Fort
-Morales, and the lines on the western heights of Passages. There
-also they fitted up barracks for the royal marines, and strengthened
-the advanced picket-house. Four of the men superintended a working
-party of the royal marines in completing and arming the redoubts
-around San Sebastian, in which service much difficulty was
-experienced from the want of an adequate working party and
-materials. So impoverished were the stores, that to provide planks
-and sleepers for the platforms and magazines, recourse was had to
-old splintered timbers from ruined sheds and buildings. Among other
-services performed by the detachment was the construction of a
-redoubt at Cachola on the high road from San Sebastian to Hernani,
-to protect that communication.
-
-On the 13th May, six rank and file were attached to Captain A.
-Henderson, R.E., and were employed for the fourth summer under his
-direction in the trigonometrical survey of the western coast of
-Scotland for the Admiralty. The nature of the operations, as on
-former occasions, necessitated their encampment on the mountains;
-and when the service closed in November, the party returned to
-Woolwich.
-
-Lord Hill and Sir Hussey Vivian, the Master-General, inspected the
-seventh company and detachment of the corps at Chatham on the 15th
-June, and afterwards witnessed the siege operations carried on by
-the troops and sappers under Colonel Warre. At the steadiness of the
-latter on parade, and the able manner in which the siege details
-were executed, his lordship expressed the highest gratification; and
-Colonel Warre, in his public orders of 16th June, also eulogised the
-corps for the cheerful and indefatigable manner in which they had
-worked in the field, adding, “that the construction of the works did
-credit to their skill as engineer workmen, and their appearance to
-their discipline and efficiency as soldiers.”
-
-Second-Captain Henry Sandham, R.E., by commission dated 1st August,
-was appointed adjutant to the corps at Chatham vicê Captain Jebb
-promoted. The latter had filled the office with much advantage to
-the public service; and his many excellent qualities, as evinced in
-the discharge of his duties, commanded the esteem of the corps, and
-caused him to be much regretted at his leaving.
-
-Sergeant Hugh Lanyon, after Sergeant-major Forbes’s removal, was
-appointed to the charge of the detachment at Sandhurst College, and
-carried on the field details in every way to the satisfaction of the
-authorities. For many years, as a private and non-commissioned
-officer, he worked at the college, and his example had the best
-effect on the successive parties with which he served. As a
-practical sapper he was one of the ablest and most skilful in the
-corps, and in the rapidity with which he threw up earth-works was
-unsurpassed. Sir Charles Pasley has done him honour by noticing the
-extraordinary labours of the sergeant in his ‘Practical Operations
-for a Siege.’[300] His willingness and ability in this respect,
-covered, in great measure, his educational deficiencies. In charge
-of the detachment he displayed his usual industry and exertion, kept
-his men in perfect discipline and order, and the excellent work
-resulting from their united efforts elicited an encomium in a
-popular periodical very creditable to the sergeant and his
-party.[301] Indeed, so effectually were all the instructional
-operations carried out, that the governor of the college, with the
-sanction of the Master-General, presented him in November with a
-case of drawing instruments, bearing an inscription flattering to
-his zeal and services.[302]
-
------
-
-Footnote 300:
-
- Pages 51 and 57, notes, 1st part, 2nd edit. It may be tolerated to
- mention the instances in which Lanyon figured, to deserve the
- record. In October, 1828, he finished a parallel in very easy soil
- of 262 cubic feet in 2 hours and 41 minutes, whilst an able-bodied
- sapper, unskilful at the pickaxe and the shovel, only completed
- the same content of excavation in 8 hours and 4 minutes! Thirty
- men were employed at the same time at similar tasks, the result of
- whose labours showed that for each man, strong and trained, it
- required to execute the work an average period of 4 hours and 54
- minutes. The other instance refers to his completing the first
- task of a parallel, nearly 109 cubic feet, in easy soil in 16
- minutes. In the Peninsula sieges, no more than 42 cubic feet of
- excavation appears to have been excavated by each individual of
- the military working parties as his first night’s work; but at the
- rate which rendered Lanyon celebrated, an active workman in these
- sieges ought to have finished his first night’s task in seven
- minutes! The comparison makes the difference so excessive, that
- credulity has scarcely sufficient tension to accredit it; but
- coming from an authority so proverbial for his accuracy, there is
- no alternative but to wonder at the achievements of the man who so
- signalized himself as a sapper; and to add, with the Colonel, the
- expression of mortification, “that the exertions of the British
- army should have fallen so miserably short of their brilliant
- exploits in the field.”
-
-Footnote 301:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii. 1837, p. 279.
-
-Footnote 302:
-
- Lanyon was afterwards promoted to be a colour-sergeant, and passed
- a few years in Canada during the revolt. On his return, his
- health, shattered by the exertions of his laborious life, caused
- him to leave the corps. Obtaining a situation as surveyor on the
- Trent and Mersey canal under Mr. Forbes, his former fellow
- labourer, he devoted himself to his new duties with his accustomed
- zeal: but in a few short months his powerful frame broke up, and
- he died at Lawton in Cheshire, in June, 1846. The integrity of his
- conduct and the utility of his services induced the directors of
- the company to honour his remains by the erection of a tomb to his
- memory. Here it would be proper to notice, he was one of those
- brave and humane miners who, in the ‘Cambria,’ bound for Vera
- Cruz, assisted to rescue the crew and passengers from the burning
- ‘Kent’ East Indiaman, in the Bay of Biscay, in February, 1825. The
- souls saved were 551, including 301 officers and men, 66 women,
- and 45 children of the 31st regiment.
-
------
-
-Late in the year the shoulder-belt of the staff-sergeants was
-superseded by a buff waist-belt, two inches broad, having carriages
-for the sword, with gilt plate, buckles, swivels, and hooks. The
-plate bore the royal arms—without supporters—within a wreath, with
-the motto “Ubique” at its base, and above, a crown. The sword was
-the same as issued in 1824, and as at present worn, but adapted by
-rings to be slung to the improved accoutrement.—See Plate XVI.,
-1854.
-
-Under orders from Lord Glenelg, the Secretary of State for the
-Colonies, corporals John Coles and Richard Auger were attached to
-the New Holland expedition under Captain Grey, the object of which
-was to gain information as to the real state of the interior and its
-resources. On the 5th July, 1837, they sailed in the ‘Beagle’ from
-Plymouth, and at the Cape of Good Hope were removed into the
-‘Lynher’ schooner. There, private Robert Mustard joined the party,
-and all reached Hanover Bay, Western Australia, on the 2nd December.
-
-Captain Grey had early formed a good opinion of corporal Coles and
-made him his chief subordinate.[303] He was emphatically his man
-Friday, and his conduct in striking instances of suffering and peril
-was marked by unfaltering devotion and fortitude, combined with
-diligence and humanity. Auger was ‘jack of all trades;’ the mechanic
-and architect; equally a tailor and a tinker; the ready mender of
-boats, and the efficient millwright and armourer of the party.
-
------
-
-Footnote 303:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ 1841, i. p. 35.
-
------
-
-On the day of arrival the Captain landed with five persons and three
-dogs at High Bluff Point, to explore from thence to Hanover Bay.
-Coles was one of the number. The sun was intensely hot. A long
-confinement on ship-board had made them unequal to much exertion.
-Forward, however, they journeyed, without the advantage of trees or
-foliage to screen them from the sun’s burning rays. The country,
-too, was rocky; and its surface, jagged and torn into crevices,
-being overgrown with spinifex and scrub, they frequently either
-slipped or fell into the covered fissures. Soon the party was
-overcome by thirst and lassitude. Two pints of water was all that
-was brought from the ship, and this, shared with the panting dogs,
-left but little for the adventurers. As time wore on, their
-weariness, before excessive, became worse, and the dogs falling back
-exhausted, were never recovered. Water was at length observed at the
-bottom of a ravine, and down its precipitous slopes Coles and others
-scrambled, only to mock the thirst they craved to satiate, for the
-inlet was salt water! However, after travelling for about another
-mile, fortune favoured them with a pool of brackish water, from
-which they drank freely.[304]
-
------
-
-Footnote 304:
-
- Ibid., 1841, i. p 67-71.
-
------
-
-Whilst the party rested by the pool, Captain Grey, accompanied by
-Coles, explored the ravine, and then returning, led the party into
-the country by a fertile valley surrounded by rocky hills. Not long
-after, the thirst and fatigue so dreaded before, recurred in an
-aggravated form, and some were almost completely worn out by it. To
-march through the night without fresh water was next to impossible;
-and as a last effort to obtain relief, the Captain pushed on for the
-coast, directing that when he fired, Mr. Lushington with the party
-should follow.[305]
-
------
-
-Footnote 305:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ 1841, i. p. 71-73.
-
------
-
-The arranged signals being given and answered, the party moved on.
-Corporal Coles was in the van, and forcing his way over broken rocks
-and down steep cliffs, he was the first to reach the Captain. At
-this spot he followed the example of his chief, and, plunging into
-the sea, refreshed his strength and appeased his thirst. Mr.
-Lushington and the sufferers now arrived, and, leaving them to try
-the effect of bathing, the Captain and his corporal moved along the
-coast to find the ‘Lynher,’ and send a boat to the party. About two
-miles they had journeyed when their progress was arrested by an arm
-of the sea, about 500 yards across. Coles kept firing his gun in
-hopes it might be heard on board. From hill to hill and cliff to
-cliff, its report re-echoed, but no answering sound came back. The
-Captain now resolved to swim the arm; and as Coles was unskilful in
-the water, he was directed to wait until the others came up and
-remain with them until the Captain returned. The latter then plunged
-into the sea, and left Coles alone in that solitary spot with wild
-and rugged cliffs overhanging the shore, and the haunts of savages
-in his vicinity.[306]
-
------
-
-Footnote 306:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 73-76.
-
------
-
-After dark the flashes of the guns had been seen by the schooner,
-and a boat was instantly despatched for the party. Coles was the
-first found; but fearing, if he then availed himself of the
-protection of the boat, he would lose the clue by which to trace the
-Captain, he directed the mate to pass on for the others. They were
-soon picked up, and returning for Coles, he was found at his
-post—one of danger and honour—and taken into the boat with his
-companions. The other shore was soon reached and the Captain
-found.[307]
-
------
-
-Footnote 307:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 79.
-
------
-
-“Have you a little water?” he asked, as he entered the boat.
-“Plenty, sir!” answered Coles, handing him a little, which the
-Captain greedily swallowed. That choice drop of water was all that
-was in the boat when Coles was picked up, and although he suffered
-severely from thirst, he would not taste it as long as he retained
-any hope that his chief might be found and be in want of it.[308]
-
------
-
-Footnote 308:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ 1841, i. p. 78.
-
------
-
-For several days the sappers and others of the expedition were
-employed in searching for water, taking short exploratory trips, and
-in removing the live stock and stores from the ‘Lynher’ to the
-location fixed upon by Captain Grey. To facilitate the service, a
-rude pathway was formed by firing the bush, and removing, with much
-toil, the rocks and vegetation. So rough was the track that a
-wheelbarrow could not be used upon it, and every burden was,
-therefore, necessarily carried on the men’s shoulders. By the 16th
-December, the country had been taken possession of, and the
-encampment completed.[309]
-
------
-
-Footnote 309:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 82-91.
-
------
-
-On the following evening, Captain Grey with corporal Coles and
-private Mustard, started from the camp to penetrate some distance
-into the interior. Confident in the steadiness and courage of his
-men he felt no anxiety. Each carried ten days' provisions, a day’s
-water, and his arms and ammunition. Thus laden, in a tropical
-climate, their progress was slow and laborious. Their route lay
-through a region of romantic beauty. Now they were urging their
-course through deep ravines alive with the gush of water and the
-foaming of cascades; now threading their tiresome way through the
-devious forest with its prickly grasses and entangled bush. Again
-they were climbing crumbling ranges, scrambling down precipices,
-tearing themselves through mangroves and densely-matted
-vegetation, traversing some wild broken land, or worming
-themselves among lofty and isolated columns of sandstone mantled
-with fragrant creepers, which, like the remains of ruined temples
-of classic ages, afforded indubitable evidence of the ravages of
-time upon rock and range. Wherever they journeyed, they found the
-same chaos—beautiful in its wildness and eccentricity—rich in its
-luxuriance and picturesqueness.[310]
-
------
-
-Footnote 310:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 93-107.
-
------
-
-Nearly six days were spent in this march, and the trials endured
-were only a prelude to what were to follow. Rice and tea in small
-quantities formed the staple of their diet. An occasional slice from
-a pheasant’s breast, or a bite from the remains of a crane left by
-the rats, gave relish to their repast. The Captain was the game
-purveyor to the party and Mustard its Soyer. On the first night they
-slept in a bark hut of their own making at the foot of a towering
-precipice; the second was passed under some overhanging rocks. On
-the other three nights they bivouacked on the slopes of the glens
-under the lightning’s vivid flash, exposed to the rains of violent
-thunderstorms. Early in the journey Mustard became ill, but he was
-soon sufficiently recovered to sustain the toils and privations of
-discovery and the discomfort of unsheltered sleep. Dripping wet,
-tired, weary and hungry, these brave men carried out the purposes of
-their mission, and, with unwavering faithfulness and zeal,
-penetrated wherever their chief desired. “Three of us,” writes the
-Captain, “slept in the open air without any covering or warm clothes
-for five successive nights, during three of which we had constant
-showers of heavy rain, and yet did not in any way suffer from this
-exposure.”[311]
-
------
-
-Footnote 311:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ 1841, i. p. 248.
-
------
-
-Want of food at length compelled the adventurers to return. Having
-gained the summit of a range, the rain began to fall in torrents. To
-escape it they retired to a detached group of rocks. A party of
-fourteen savages now appeared, brandishing their spears, bounding
-from rock to rock, and making the wilderness ring with their war
-cry. This was answered by a party coming over the high rock in rear
-of the travellers. In this critical situation a hostile attitude was
-at once taken up. There was a natural opening like an embrasure
-between the blocks of the rock, through which they could level their
-pieces, and each gallant fellow took his station, with orders to
-fire one by one if the command were given. The Captain fired over
-their heads; but this one report was quite enough, for the savages
-fled on all sides, and the party thus left to itself, hurried home
-through a tempest of rain and reached the cantonment before
-nightfall on the 22nd December.[312]
-
------
-
-Footnote 312:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 93-107.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1838.
-
-Services of party in New Holland—Start for the interior—Labours of
- the expedition; corporal Auger—Captain Grey and corporal Coles
- expect an attack—Attitude of private Auger at the camp against the
- menace of the natives—Captain Grey and Coles attacked;
- their critical situation; the chief wounded; devotion of
- Coles—Usefulness of Auger—Renew the march; Auger finds a singular
- ford—Discovers a cave with a sculptured face in it—Mustard traces
- the spoor of a quadruped still unseen in New Holland—A sleep in
- the trees—Trials of the party—Primitive washing—Auger the van of
- the adventurers—Humane attention of the Captain to Mustard; reach
- Hanover Bay; arrive at the Mauritius—Detachment in Spain—Attack on
- Orio—Usurvil; Oyarzun—Miscellaneous employments of the
- party—Reinforcement to it; Casa Aquirre—Orio—Secret mission to
- Muñagorri—Second visit to the same chief—Notice of corporal John
- Down—Bidassoa—Triangulation of north of Scotland—Also of the Frith
- of the Clyde—Insurrection in Canada; guard of honour to Lord
- Durham—Company inspected by the Governor-General on the
- plains of Abraham—Inspection at Niagara by Sir George
- Arthur—Services and movements of the company in Canada;
- attack at Beauharnois—Submarine demolition of wrecks near
- Gravesend—Expedient to prevent accidents by vessels fouling the
- diving-bell lighter—Conduct of the sappers in the operations;
- exertions of sergeant-major Jones—Fatal accident to a
- diver—Intrepidity of sergeants Ross and Young—Blasting the bow of
- the brig ‘William,’ by sergeant-major Jones—Withdrawal of the
- sappers from the canal at Hythe.
-
-
-Some weeks of the early year were spent by Captain Grey and his men
-in a variety of occupations preparatory to a long journey into the
-interior. Sheds were built for the stores, pack-saddles made by
-corporal Auger for the Timour horses, and short excursions through
-wood and wilderness undertaken. Pathways were also constructed for
-the horses in forest and glen, without which it would have been
-impracticable to pursue their course. These were formed by burning
-the bush, and removing, by manual strength and dexterity, huge
-boulders and fallen trees levelled by age and storm, that everywhere
-intercepted the track.
-
-On the 3rd February the expedition was in motion. Twenty-six wild
-ponies were attached to the party. Each man had three or four of
-these giddy unbroken animals in charge, fastened together by ropes.
-From the ponies straying in different directions, and getting
-frequently entangled with rocks and trees, the difficult nature of
-the service was greatly increased. As beasts of burden they were of
-little use. In steep ravines or in rugged country, the stores were
-almost wholly carried by the adventurers; and this, coupled with the
-task of guiding the untamed horses and the hard travelling in a
-rocky country abounding with clefts, thick bush, and forest, made
-the route one of unmitigated toil and fatigue. In these duties
-corporal Auger particularly distinguished himself; for, “possessing
-the power of carrying on his back very heavy burdens, he took every
-occasion of exercising it in such a way as to stimulate the others
-and very much to accelerate the movements of the expedition.”[313]
-
------
-
-Footnote 313:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 121-139.
-
------
-
-With corporal Coles the captain started on the 6th February to
-explore the country in his front. Coming to a deep ravine with a
-body of water at its base, he wished to find a passage out of it.
-Both searched for many hours until after sunset, but without avail.
-The ravine was bounded by inaccessible cliffs with other ravines
-branching into it, which “invariably terminated in precipitous
-cascades.” A great portion of the exploration was spent in wading
-the flooded valley up to their bellies in water. On their return
-homewards they came upon a large party of natives, and Coles
-followed the captain up the northern slope of the ravine ready for
-an attack; but the savages moved on without molesting the weary
-travelers.[314]
-
------
-
-Footnote 314:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 136-138.
-
------
-
-Five days afterwards corporal Auger and two men were left at the
-camp, while the rest of the expedition were detached. About two
-hundred of the natives assembled across a stream at the foot of a
-hill near to them. They were armed. At the time of their appearance
-Auger was quietly seated on the ground cleaning Lieutenant
-Lushington’s double-barrelled gun, with its springs, screws, and
-cramps lying around him. Seeing his comrades nervously perturbed, he
-coolly refixed one of the barrels, and mounting the lock, loaded the
-gun with some loose powder. Meanwhile the two men turned out with
-their muskets, and the trio posting themselves on the brow of the
-hill, motioned the savages away. They answered by a shout, and
-retired a little; when Auger and the party now took counsel, and
-agreeing that it would be imprudent with their small number to hold
-intercourse with so large a force of natives, they resolved not to
-allow them to approach beyond a point which they considered safe;
-“and in the event of any armed portion passing the stream towards
-the tents in defiance of their signals, to fire on them one by one.”
-These cautious resolves, however, it was unnecessary to enforce, as
-the savages, after Auger had given them a blank discharge, hurried
-off in the direction of Captain Grey.[315]
-
------
-
-Footnote 315:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 144.
-
------
-
-The Captain, accompanied by Coles and a Cape man, had been out since
-the morning examining the country to choose a route for the next
-day’s march, and were working with all their energies at a road for
-the horses, when the savages from the camp poured into the forest.
-The Cape man, who was in the rear, first saw them; and instead of
-calling to Coles or the Captain for assistance, took to his heels,
-pursued by the natives. The three were now engaged for their lives,
-and taking up a position behind some rocks, the men were directed to
-fire separately. Coles was armed with the Captain’s rifle, but it
-was covered with a cloth case for protection against the rain. This
-becoming entangled with the lock, his services at a critical moment
-were lost. The Captain now gave Coles his gun to complete the
-reloading, and taking the rifle, tore off the cover and stept from
-behind the rocks. In an instant three spears pierced his body, but a
-deadly shot from the rifle slew the principal antagonist. The combat
-at once ceased; but, though it had only lasted a few seconds, the
-spears and weapons strewn in such abundance about that wild position
-gave proof of its severity. Neither Coles nor the Cape man was
-injured, but the Captain was badly wounded. Coles bound up the
-Captain’s hip wound as well as he could, and supporting him with his
-arm, assisted him homewards. Some hours were spent in the journey.
-The track was lost, and the Captain, leaning more and more heavily
-on Coles, showed signs of increasing weakness. A beaten route at
-last was gained and a stream in its vicinity crossed; but the
-Captain, in the effort, strained his wounded hip and fell on the
-opposite shore unable to rise. Coles, with his usual devotion,
-volunteered to go alone to the party and send assistance. This he
-did, bounding over rock and cliff, through wood and scrub, jumping
-gaping rifts, and fording streams with the natives on his trail. In
-a short hour, through his unflinching ardour and daring, the surgeon
-and Mr. Lushington were ministering to the wants of the wounded
-chief.[316] The only drawback to this day’s steadiness and fidelity
-was the loss, by Coles, of the Captain’s valuable note-book.[317]
-The nipple of the rifle injured by Coles in his eagerness to remove
-the case, was taken out by Auger; but lacking proper tools, several
-days were spent in niggling perseverance, to drill it out with a
-bradawl.
-
------
-
-Footnote 316:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 154.
-
-Footnote 317:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 153.
-
------
-
-The expedition was now delayed for a time; and corporal Auger, whose
-ingenuity and skill as a carpenter had frequently been of service,
-made the Captain a low stretcher to lie upon, which gave him a
-little more ease.[318] To relieve him, moreover, from unnecessary
-discomfort and pain, Auger, with feeling solicitude, carried the
-chief in his arms at times when he seemed to need it, to convenient
-distances in the vicinity of the tent. Athletic and careful, he was
-not a bad substitute for a sedan.
-
------
-
-Footnote 318:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 158.
-
------
-
-On the 27th February the party was again in motion, but their
-progress was slow. Much time was spent in constructing pathways in
-ravines and clefty land otherwise inaccessible, and in finding fords
-over streams, and passages across swamps. To one ford Captain Grey
-particularly alludes. On the 27th March, he and his party sought for
-a ford across a river about a hundred yards wide in S. Lat. 15° 49´,
-E. Long. 125° 6´, but their efforts were fruitless. It therefore
-appeared inevitable that the winding of the river should be
-followed, or the party branched off in another direction to find an
-open route in advance. This surmise was not very agreeable. Auger
-pondered a little over this aspect of the journey, and soon resolved
-to make a survey of the stream untrammelled by the presence of any
-one. Accordingly, disposing of a hasty breakfast, he started alone
-to the river, and returned in about an hour reporting he had found
-one. The ponies were at once moved on, and as they wound through it
-following a circuitous course, it was nowhere less than knee deep,
-but on each side, at times, the water was dangerously high. “I could
-not,” writes the Captain, “but admire the perseverance of Auger, in
-having discovered so intricate a ford as this was.”[319]
-
------
-
-Footnote 319:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 209.
-
------
-
-Two or three nights before finding this ford he tied himself among
-the branches of a stunted acacia-tree, and shaken by the wind slept
-as soundly as in a cradle rocked by an attentive nurse. He did this
-to escape the wet and chills of the stony ground on which the
-travellers bivouacked and rested during the darkness.
-
-Much labour was given in tracing the courses of rivers, the
-direction of mountain ranges, and acquiring information of the
-physical features of the country, and of its natural history.[320]
-All these services were not accomplished without much exertion and
-diligence. To scale the mountain side, to creep down the perilous
-declivity, to wade the morass, to traverse a wild country torn into
-fissures, and encumbered by rocks and scrubs and a dense vegetation,
-were but their common daily task; but when to these exertions are
-added the trials arising from privation, constant exposure to the
-sun and the storm, the bare shelter by night of some overhanging
-cliff or frail tent, with the discomfort of being, for days
-together, unable to undress or wash themselves, a faint glimpse only
-is caught of the harassing and difficult nature of their duties,
-their weariness, their sufferings and hardships.
-
------
-
-Footnote 320:
-
- Auger accompanied Captain Grey on one occasion to examine a
- sandstone ridge in the hope of finding egress from it. After
- proceeding some distance the corporal discovered a cave, in which
- was an intaglio face and head cut in the rock, of rather superior
- workmanship for an untutored savage; and Captain Grey has
- distinguished the work by giving a drawing of it in his Travels.
- Vol. i. p. 206.
-
- Private Mustard, who had been at the Cape of Good Hope, brought
- his experience to bear upon the present service. He discovered the
- spoor of a large quadruped with a divided hoof. He had seen like
- impressions at the Cape. Captain Grey conceiving that Mustard had
- made some mistake, paid no attention to his report, until he
- afterwards saw traces of the animal himself. On one occasion the
- Captain followed its track for a mile and a half, when it was lost
- in rocky ground. The footmarks were larger than those of a
- buffalo, and it was apparently more bulky, for where it had passed
- through the brushwood, shrubs in its way of considerable size, had
- been crushed aside or broken down. The animal has not yet been
- seen. Its existence is, however, asserted, from the peculiarity of
- the spoor. Vol. i. p. 242, ‘Grey’s Travels.’
-
------
-
-The mode of refreshing themselves by washing was as primitive as
-inconvenient, but the trying nature of the service led them to find
-contentment in the roughest resources. Full dressed, they often
-plunged into the lakes to scrape and wash away the accumulations of
-days from their persons and clothes; and on emerging from the
-waters, bearing their dripping suits on their backs, they ran about
-to prevent colds or rheumatic seizures, while the sun steamed off
-the moisture from their threadbare garments.
-
-Corporal Auger in these wanderings was the chief dependent.
-Uncompromising, he was straightforward in his duties; enterprising,
-he feared nothing. On most occasions he was sent ahead of the party
-to pace the distance, to find the track through regions of country
-covered with rank grass more than fourteen feet high, and to
-discover fords to assist the progress of the wayfarers and thus
-prevent depressing and harassing detours or returns. The moral
-courage of that man must indeed have been great, who was the first
-to penetrate a shrouded and unbroken stretch of solitude, unaware of
-the dangers in which his every step might suddenly have involved
-him.
-
-The expedition had now penetrated two rivers beyond the Glenelg and
-Prince Regent, and then turned towards Hanover Bay. On 1st April
-they started, encountering difficulties of a character similar to
-those already borne with such cheerfulness and fortitude. Seven days
-of their journey found private Mustard crippled from falling into a
-crevice in the rock. Here the Captain, though suffering himself from
-the wound in his hip, yielded his horse for Mustard’s convenience.
-On the 15th April, the party reached Hanover Bay, having lost nearly
-all their live stock and fifteen of their ponies. A few more days
-were occupied in collecting the stores and shipping them, when the
-expedition sailed for the Isle of France and arrived on the 17th
-May. The three sappers were landed in a very sickly and emaciated
-state, and during their stay at the Mauritius were under medical
-treatment in hospital.
-
-On the 27th January, nineteen non-commissioned officers and privates
-of the detachment serving with the naval force under the command of
-Lord John Hay at San Sebastian, were present with General
-O’Donnell’s army in an attack on the village of Orio, and burnt and
-sank several flat-bottomed boats under the fire of musketry from the
-opposite side of the river.
-
-On the following day, at the request of the Spanish general, the
-same sappers were despatched to Usurvil to intrench and fortify a
-large garden at the outskirts of the village. The work was instantly
-commenced; but when the party was about to destroy the bridge which
-had been partially broken, General O’Donnell changed his intention
-and the sappers returned to San Sebastian. Shortly after, the
-detachment marched with the marine battalion to Oyarzun to cover the
-operations of General O’Donnell at Bera.
-
-About this period the available men of the party fitted up the
-‘Columbia’ steamer for the accommodation of troops, and a storehouse
-for the use of the squadron. At Passages, also, the carpenters
-converted the church into a commissariat depôt for stores and
-provisions, and strengthened and improved the fortifications around
-San Sebastian and the heights. All the works were carried out with
-difficulty; for the Spanish authorities could scarcely command the
-use of a plank or even a nail for their purposes, and it was only by
-the force of habitual and urgent requisitions, that they could be
-induced to press for any materials for the service of the
-department.
-
-By the ‘Alonzo’ transport a reinforcement of eleven rank and file
-arrived in May, increasing the detachment to thirty-one of all
-ranks. Late in the month, these men, with others of the party, were,
-at the recommendation of General O’Donnell, detached to Casa Aquirre
-on the left of Venta, to render it sufficiently defensive to receive
-the garrison of Astigaraga in the event of its being compelled to
-retire. The working party consisted of a company of the Spanish
-marine battalion of seventy soldiers and twenty peasants, and the
-position was completed with the necessary works by March, 1839.
-
-On the 24th June, twenty-five of the detachment moved with a part of
-the army to the river Orio, and, under fire, levelled the parapets
-and works of the Carlists.
-
-In October, four men of the party in plain clothes under orders of
-secrecy, accompanied Colonel Colquhoun of the royal artillery, and
-Lieutenant Vicars of the engineers, to the headquarters of
-Muñagorri, to assist in putting him in motion and to secure his
-position. The mission reached Sara on the 17th, then passed to a
-hill to the east of La Rune mountain, about four miles from the
-village, where the chief was posted, and afterwards to St. Jean Pied
-de Port; but owing to the opposition of Aquirre, the commandant of
-Valcarlos, who would not allow the pacificators to take up quarters
-in his neighbourhood, the expedition, unable from this cause to
-assist the Fuerist chief, returned to San Sebastian on the 24th
-October.
-
-The same sappers, in plain clothes as before,[321] accompanied the
-above-named officers on a second mission to Muñagorri in November.
-The party reached St. Jean Pied de Port viâ Bayonne on the 5th.
-Aquirre, acting under the orders of Espartero, was firm in his
-resolution to resist the pacificators in the occupation of
-Valcarlos; and as he would not yield a pass to the force of
-Muñagorri, the project of entering Spain at Valcarlos was
-necessarily abandoned, and the expedition once more retraced its
-steps to San Sebastian, where it arrived on the 16th.
-
------
-
-Footnote 321:
-
- The senior of whom was second-corporal John Down, afterwards
- sergeant. In September, 1835, while pontooning in the Medway
- at Halling, he plunged into the river and saved from drowning,
- by means of an oar, private F. Adams of the corps. He also
- relieved from a very precarious situation lance-corporal
- Woodhead, of the Honourable East India Company’s sappers, who
- had jumped in to assist private Adams. For his courage and
- humanity the Royal Humane Society granted Down a pecuniary
- reward, and his officers gave him a military hold-all,
- containing the usual articles, chiefly of silver, bearing on a
- silver plate this inscription—“Presented by his officers to
- private John Down for his gallant conduct in rescuing a
- comrade from drowning.” This non-commissioned officer served
- two stations at Gibraltar and Bermuda, and being pensioned at
- 1_s._ 9_d._ in October, 1849, retired to Chatham, where he is
- now filling the humble but sufficient situation of pump-master
- to the Barracks at Brompton.
-
------
-
-Late in the same month, twelve men of the detachment were sent to
-the Bidassoa to fortify the position taken up by the Fuerist chief.
-A fatality attended all his movements and projects. St. Marcial had
-been fixed upon by him to establish his force there; but before the
-operation could be effected, the Queen’s troops under General
-O’Donnell were already in possession of it, and the approach of
-Muñagorri was therefore interdicted. Another position, however, was
-soon selected near the Bidassoa, and a redoubt forthwith commenced.
-Sixty peasants from San Sebastian and a small force from the ranks
-of the Fuerists formed the working party. The latter were indolent
-to the last degree, and even the presence of Muñagorri and Jarregui
-failed to inspire them with the necessary energy. The sappers worked
-from morning till nightfall, and often remained on duty the entire
-day, exposed the whole time to the drenching storm. All the works
-were marked out, and every detail for the defence was conducted by
-the sappers under the direction of Lieutenant Vicars, and their zeal
-and usefulness were noticed in commendatory terms. After completing
-the defences, the party rejoined Lord John Hay’s force early in
-January, 1839.
-
-In May one sergeant and twelve privates were detached to the north
-of Scotland, and employed on the trigonometrical survey of that part
-of the country until December under the direction of Lieutenant
-Robinson, royal engineers. This mountain detachment endured much
-fatigue in carrying out the service, and for their diligence and
-exertion in conducting the operation, received a high character.
-
-Six rank and file were employed on a similar duty at the Frith of
-the Clyde under Captain A. Henderson, R.E., and rejoined the corps
-on the 24th October. The men were selected on account of their
-physical strength, and were in every respect found equal to the
-arduous requirements of the service.
-
-The insurrection in the Canadas, headed by Papineau, induced the
-Government to send a company to that colony. Captain Colin Mackenzie
-with one sergeant and thirty-seven rank and file went out in the
-‘Hastings,’ seventy-four, as a guard of honour to Lord Durham when
-his lordship was appointed Governor-General in Canada. The
-remainder, three sergeants and forty-five rank and file, sailed in
-the steamer ‘Dee.’ The guard of honour landed at Quebec on the 29th
-May, and the ‘Dee’ detachment on the 14th June. A proportionate
-quantity of intrenching tools and engineer stores were landed with
-the company.
-
-At the celebration of Her Majesty’s coronation on the plains of
-Abraham in June, 1838, the Earl of Durham minutely inspected the
-company, and in the presence of several general officers, noticed
-the steadiness with which the company marched past. This expression
-the Governor-General repeated at the chateau of St. Louis on the
-28th June, and added, that the soldier-like appearance of the
-sappers and their steadiness under arms exceeded his expectations.
-The good conduct of the company also elicited his lordship’s
-approbation.
-
-While at Niagara, on the 11th September, the company was reviewed by
-Major-General Sir George Arthur, with the King’s dragoon guards and
-43rd regiment, and his Excellency spoke in praise of the appearance
-of the company, its marching and manœuvring.
-
-Soon after, the head-quarters of the company were removed to the
-Niagara frontier to place it in a state of defence. The work of
-reparation commenced with Fort Mississaqua. About this time twelve
-non-commissioned officers and men were removed, for engineer
-services, to Amherstburg, and another party of twenty-two of all
-ranks was detached to Montreal. The latter was detained at Cornwall
-for a few days by Major Phillpotts of the corps, and, under
-Lieutenant Roberts, formed the advanced guard with a detachment of
-the 71st light infantry, in a successful attack on the rebels at
-Beauharnois on the 10th November, 1838. The good conduct of this
-party was acknowledged by Colonel Carmichael who commanded the
-attack.
-
-A novel duty now devolved upon the corps in the subaqueous
-destruction of the brig ‘William,’ sunk off Tilbury Fort in May,
-1837, and the schooner ‘Glenmorgan,’ wrecked in Gravesend Reach
-several years before. The wrecks were impediments to navigation; and
-the Lord Mayor, after consulting Colonel Pasley, determined to have
-the vessels destroyed by gunpowder. Operations commenced on the 19th
-May by a detachment of thirty non-commissioned officers and men of
-the 8th company, under the direction of Captain Yule, royal
-engineers, and in a few days the wrecks were blown to pieces by two
-great charges of gunpowder of 2340 lbs. each. The object desired was
-thus satisfactorily attained. The sappers executed all the minor
-fitments not requiring the skill of shipwrights. They also descended
-in the diving-bell and diving-helmet, managed the movements of the
-former, and besides preparing and executing the mining details of
-the operation, assisted the seamen and the riggers in the naval
-arrangements.[322] The men in the diving-bell were exposed to great
-danger from the violent action, on two occasions, of the ebb and
-flood tides, and had they not been very resolute men, would have
-given up the attempt.
-
------
-
-Footnote 322:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii. 1838, p. 45, 274.
-
------
-
-During the service, a vessel ran foul of the diving-bell lighter,
-and carried it above a quarter of a mile up the river, disconnecting
-the great cylinder containing the charge. The next day,
-sergeant-major Jones, acting with the leading rigger, “got the
-lighter very nearly back into her former place over the wreck, and
-recovered the cylinder and leaden pipe from the bottom of the
-river.” To prevent the recurrence of a similar accident, the guard
-of the detachment on board, kept up a brisk fire of blank cartridges
-when any vessel approached them in the night, which had the desired
-effect.[323]
-
------
-
-Footnote 323:
-
- Ibid., iii. p. 41, 42.
-
------
-
-Of the “indefatigable exertions of the sappers,” Colonel Pasley made
-particular mention in his official report, and added, “it was a
-pleasure to see them, and the seamen and riggers, working so
-cheerfully together.” “Sergeant-major Jones,” writes the Colonel,
-“who is equally skilful and active as a miner and a pontoneer, was
-quite in his element.”[324]
-
------
-
-Footnote 324:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii. 1838, p. 45.
-
-The operations did not terminate without the occurrence of a
-melancholy accident. On the 21st of May, Corporal Henry Mitchell,
-who had been practised as a diver for a short time in the Medway,
-was sent down in a diving-helmet to fix a couple of eye-bolts to
-the side of the ‘William,’ preparatory to the first explosion.
-“After examining the wreck, he came up and gave a favourable
-account of his prospects,” and then “took his tools and descended
-again; but owing to a rope fixed round him having become entangled
-in the wreck, the signals usually made by pulling this rope could
-not be distinguished;” nor could he be drawn to the surface of the
-water. On Colonel Pasley reaching the wreck, and as soon as the
-necessary arrangements could be completed, sergeants John Ross and
-James Young with two privates, voluntarily descended a second time
-in the diving-bell, and after a few minutes' careful exertion,
-succeeded in finding their comrade; but he was quite dead, having
-been at the bottom upwards of twelve hours. The intrepid conduct
-of these non-commissioned officers was much applauded.[325]
-
------
-
-Footnote 325:
-
- Ibid., iii. p. 40, 41.
-
------
-
-The great explosions above referred to, had not, it was ascertained,
-touched the bow of the brig ‘William;’ and in August operations were
-resumed to destroy it. The entire service, except the duty of
-diving, devolved on the sappers. A leaden cylinder, to hold a charge
-of 315 lbs. of gunpowder, was made by some artificers of the corps
-at Chatham; but it failed on application, and tin oil bottles,
-containing small charges prepared by the sappers, were found to
-answer the purpose. These were taken to the wreck every morning by
-sergeant-major Jones and another non-commissioned officer, and being
-properly fixed by the divers and fired by the sergeant-major, the
-remaining fragments of the wreck were so broken and dispersed, as to
-render the anchorage perfectly safe for the shipping. Fifteen of
-such charges were fired against the ‘William,’ and two more, to make
-‘assurance doubly sure,’ were also exploded among the scattered
-timbers of the ‘Glenmorgan.’ Sergeant-major Jones was the executive
-on this service under the direction of Colonel Pasley.[326]
-
-Under the authority of the Act of 1st Vict. cap. 20, the Ordnance
-received in charge the royal military canal at Hythe. With a view to
-a more economical expenditure in its control and repair, the company
-of the royal staff corps in charge of it, was disbanded in
-July,[327] and a detachment of two sergeants and forty-two rank and
-file of the royal sappers and miners succeeded to the duty. Of this
-detachment, one sergeant and twenty rank and file had been detached
-to the canal early in April, and the remainder, to the above total,
-was completed by an incorporation of several men from the staff
-corps company, and six non-commissioned officers and gunners
-acquainted with the care and management of horses from the royal
-artillery. The principal duties of the detachment consisted in
-taking charge of the locks and sluices, collecting tolls, repairing
-the drains, fences, &c., and in the execution of various laborious
-services in mud and water. A careful review of this arrangement, and
-of the receipts and expenses of the canal, however, induced Sir
-Hussey Vivian, the Master-General, to supersede the employment of
-sappers by pensioners from the ordnance corps at very reduced wages;
-and accordingly in December, 1840, the detachment was reduced to
-thirty-two of all ranks; in May, 1841, to seven; and in the
-following month, to one sergeant, who continued on duty at Hythe
-till October, 1842.
-
------
-
-Footnote 326:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii. 1838, p. 271-274.
-
-Footnote 327:
-
- The disbandment of this company was the last in the annihilation
- of the corps. In that month it disappeared from the muster-rolls
- of the army.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1839.
-
-Expedition to Western Australia under Captain Grey—Excursion with
- Auger to the north of Perth—Search for Mr. Ellis—Exploration of
- shores from Freemantle—Bernier and Dorre Islands; want of
- water; trials of the party—Water allowance reduced—A lagoon
- discovered—Privations and hardships of the party—Return to Bernier
- Island for stores—Its altered appearance—Destruction of the depôt
- of provisions—Consternation of Coles—Auger’s example under the
- circumstances—Expedition makes for Swan River—Perilous landing at
- Gantheaume Bay—Overland journey to Perth; straits of the
- adventurers—Auger searching for a missing man—Coles observes the
- natives; arrangements to meet them—Water found by Auger—A spring
- discovered by Coles at Water Peak—Disaffection about long marches;
- forced journeys determined upon; the two sappers and a few others
- accompany the Captain—Desperate hardships and fatigues; the last
- revolting resource of thirst—Extraordinary exertions of the
- travellers; their sufferings from thirst; water found—Appalling
- bivouac—Coles’s agony and fortitude—Struggles of the adventurers;
- they at last reach Perth—Auger joins two expeditions in search of
- the slow walkers—Disposal of Coles and Auger.
-
-
-Captain Grey of the 83rd regiment, undertook a second expedition;
-this time to Western Australia. As soon as the sappers had recovered
-from the hardships and privations to which they had been subjected
-in New Holland, they volunteered again to accompany him. Private R.
-Mustard, too much shaken by the injury he had sustained on the
-former expedition, was unfit to proceed, and was left with the
-company of the corps at the Mauritius. On the 21st of August, 1838,
-the party embarked at Port Louis; and, on the 18th of September,
-arrived at Perth, Western Australia.
-
-Delays prevented the Captain immediately pursuing his object, but to
-turn the interval to profit, he made a short excursion to the north
-of Perth with Mr. Frederick Smith and Corporal Auger. The
-exploration continued from the 30th November to the 8th of December,
-and was marked by incidents of a pacific character. None of the
-difficulties which clogged their previous exertions were experienced
-on this trip, and, coupled with the variety and beauty of the
-scenery, but little enthusiasm was needed to make the travellers
-feel an interest in the service.[328]
-
------
-
-Footnote 328:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 292-309.
-
------
-
-The year opened with Captain Grey and four adventurers, including
-his two sappers, travelling into the interior in search of Mr.
-George Ellis and his two companions, who, having left the Williams'
-River for the Leschenault on the coast, had been out for several
-days beyond the period it was expected they would reach their
-destination, and fears were entertained for their safety. Captain
-Grey and his men steadily pursued their object, till the missing
-travellers, alive and in tolerable health, turned up to their
-exertions at Augusta. After twenty-two days' bush-ranging, the
-Captain and his party re-entered Perth on the 31st of January. This
-episodical service was one of fatigue, particularly in crossing the
-Darling range and in pushing their route through forests and over
-wild and rugged ground. In some districts, the want of water was
-severely felt by them, and for eleven hours in one day, they
-journeyed onwards under a sultry sun, suffering from excessive
-thirst.[329]
-
------
-
-Footnote 329:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 310-328.
-
------
-
-On the 17th of February, the expedition of twelve persons sailed
-from Fremantle to examine the shores of Shark’s Bay and the country
-behind it, taking with them three whale-boats for future use. On the
-25th, they landed at Bernier Island, discovering, when too late,
-that the keg of tobacco which was to have constituted their chief
-consolation in hardship, was left on board. After landing the
-provisions, the greater part of them were buried for security, but
-the want of water drove the expedition to Dorre Island on the 28th
-of February, where their persevering search was equally unavailing,
-for the little that was obtained was extracted by suction from small
-holes in the rock. Already the party had had one of its boats
-knocked to pieces, and its stores lost, whilst the other two boats
-in a hurricane were much injured. For three days the sappers were
-engaged in their repair, and on the 3rd of March, the travellers,
-oppressed with thirst, wearied by fatigue, and exposed to the full
-blaze of a powerful sun, sailed for the main.[330]
-
------
-
-Footnote 330:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 329-344.
-
------
-
-Reaching a sand-bank, the boats were tracked and pulled onwards,
-through deep mud and weeds, into a dense mangrove creek, to land;
-and, in accomplishing this service, severe trials were encountered,
-the difficulties of which were increased by the exhaustion which
-labour and the want of water induced. In fifteen days, the allowance
-had been reduced from two and a half pints to half a pint a
-day.[331]
-
------
-
-Footnote 331:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 345-351.
-
------
-
-Pursuing their journey, a lagoon of fresh water was soon found, and
-all bent the knee to take their fill of the luxury. A black line
-round the countenance showed how deeply each had regaled himself.
-Next day, the two sappers and some of the party visited the lagoon
-again, and in the evening returned loaded to the boats.[332]
-
------
-
-Footnote 332:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 351-353.
-
------
-
-Several days had been spent in exploration and adventure, during
-which the river Gascoyne had been discovered, and a few objects of
-geographical interest named. On one occasion, a storm having
-overtaken the wayfarers, their boats, which were swamped, were
-dragged amid much danger to shore; and their flour, saturated with
-salt water, was now quite spoilt. Nevertheless, unwholesome as it
-was, they were forced to use it, as they had nothing else to eat.
-Illness now began to appear among the party, and as there was
-neither food nor medicine to give them, their situation was
-deplorable. While in this helpless state, they were attacked by a
-body of about thirty natives near Kolaina plains; but fortunately,
-they succeeded in pushing off their boats without any serious
-accident occurring.[333] Auger at the time was in the head of the
-boat, soldering up the breaches in an old kettle, valuable in its
-way, for the expedition had none other for its cooking purposes,
-when a spear, thrown by a savage, whizzed past the industrious
-tinker, and struck the seaman Ruston.
-
------
-
-Footnote 333:
-
- Ibid., i. p. 351-379.
-
------
-
-After a period of intense desolation and gloom, in which the
-expedition was exposed to the fury of angry storms, and the pinching
-calls of want, the boats put to sea; and surrounded by perils both
-from surf and squall, the adventurers returned to the Gascoyne.
-Launching or beaching their boats on the rocky coast was a service
-of hazard and difficulty. On the 20th of March the provisions were
-nearly expended, and to replenish their stores, the boats made for
-Bernier Island. A gale of wind caught them on the passage, and they
-only made good the landing by almost superhuman exertion. Here a
-store of provisions had been buried, when the expedition first made
-the island, but from its very altered appearance, caused by the
-ravages of recent hurricanes, Captain Grey doubted whether the depôt
-could be found. Fearing some disaster had befallen the stores, he
-considered it unadvisable that the “discovery should be made in the
-presence of too many persons, as future discipline would depend on
-the first impression that was given.” He therefore selected Mr.
-Smith and corporal Coles, in whose courage, disinterestedness, and
-self-possession, he placed great confidence, to accompany him to the
-depôt. The corporal took a spade with him.[334]
-
------
-
-Footnote 334:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 379-391.
-
------
-
-Before they had gone far, they observed staves of flour casks
-scattered about amongst the rocks and high up on the sand hills.
-Coles, taking a rapid glance of the ground, “persisted, they were so
-far inland, that they could only have come from the flour casks
-which the expedition had emptied before starting.” Moving on in
-their anxious survey, they “next came to a cask of salt provisions
-washed high and dry at least twenty feet above the usual high-water
-mark; the sea had evidently not been near the spot for a long
-period, as it was half covered with drift sand, which must have
-taken some time to accumulate. This Coles again easily accounted
-for; it was merely the cask which had been lost from the wreck of
-the 'Paul Pry.'” The Captain thought otherwise, but made no remark.
-At length they reached the depôt. “So changed was it, that both Mr.
-Smith and Coles persisted it was not the place: but on going to the
-shore, there were some very remarkable rocks, on the top of which
-lay a flour cask more than half empty, with the head knocked out,
-but not otherwise injured. This was also washed up at least twenty
-feet of perpendicular elevation beyond high water mark. The dreadful
-certainty now flashed on the minds of Mr. Smith and corporal Coles;”
-but poor Coles, usually so imperturbable in character, and so ready
-to find reasons for the alarming appearances which had met his gaze
-at every step, did not bear the surprise as well as had been
-expected. He dashed the spade upon the ground with almost ferocious
-violence, and looking up to Captain Grey, said, “All lost, sir! We
-are all lost.” A few rallying words from the Captain, however, made
-him “perfectly cool and collected, and he promised to make light of
-the misfortune to the rest, and to observe the strictest
-discipline.” Coles with eager economy now collected every particle
-of the precious flour, discoloured as it was, that was left in the
-barrel and strewn on the rocks, and with another bag of spoiled
-flour found among the sea-weeds, the adventurers returned to the
-party. Their tale of distress was soon told, and all heard it with
-dismay. “Mr. Walker and corporal Auger set an excellent example to
-the others. Two seamen named Woods, indisposed to bear, in common
-with the adventurers, the sacrifices that impended, seized the first
-opportunity of endeavouring to appropriate to themselves the
-miserable remnant of damper belonging to the party; but their
-unmanly intention being observed, a sentry was placed in charge of
-the scanty store of provisions, which only amounted to about nine
-lbs. of salt meat, and about sixty lbs. of tolerably good
-flour.”[335]
-
------
-
-Footnote 335:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 391-396.
-
------
-
-The expedition quitted Bernier Island on the 22nd of March, to make
-for Swan River. In taking this course, it was hoped, that if any
-accident occurred Perth could be reached by walking. Crossing the
-bay, the party sailed to the southward, examining the coast, and
-after a brief stay on Perron’s Peninsula and Dirk Hartog’s Island,
-the boats on the 31st, reached Gantheaume Bay. Eleven days were
-spent in achieving this run: the coasting was very perilous, and the
-gales that caught the leaky boats as they swept along, were
-terrific. Both were more than once in imminent danger, but the
-unsparing energy and determination of the men carried them safely to
-the shore. At Gantheaume Bay, however, the landing was not effected
-without casualty. The surf was high and raging, and the wind drove
-the boats along at a fearful rate. Onwards they plunged, now dancing
-on a swell, now pitching in a trough, now quite unmanageable, when
-one was tossed over by a furious wave and dashed in fragments
-amongst the rocks and breakers. In an instant, its crew and the two
-sappers were struggling through the foaming surf, but after tumbling
-amongst oars and water-kegs, and the spars and splinters of the
-wreck, all clambered to the summit of the cliff, torn, jaded, and
-exhausted.[336]
-
------
-
-Footnote 336:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ i. p. 396-412.
-
------
-
-A crisis had now arrived which it was necessary to meet with
-firmness. Assembling the expedition, the captain explained matters
-as they appeared, and of which the travellers were only too
-cognizant. Auger, who all along had repaired the boats, was asked by
-the chief, if they could be put in any kind of condition for
-service. Knowing their unfitness for anything, and the impossibility
-of making them even temporarily seaworthy, he frankly answered in
-the negative. Fortified by the professional opinion of a truthful
-and skilful artificer, Captain Grey took his determination at once
-and arrangements were made accordingly. On the 2nd April, the party
-started from Gantheaume Bay, resolved to reach Perth by marching.
-The provisions had been shared out—20 lbs. of flour and 1 lb. of
-salt meat per man. The flour was of a brown colour with a fermented
-taste, like bad beer, and nothing but dire necessity could induce
-any one to eat it. The distance to be travelled was about 300 miles
-in a direct line, without taking hills, valleys, and deviations into
-account. Corporals Coles and Auger, besides their provisions, &c.,
-carried a pocket chronometer and a large sextant, turn about. Coles
-also bore the Captain’s rifle, and Auger a choice book valued by the
-chief, and a housewife containing some needles and thread and a few
-patches. In all the dreadful hardships that beset them, even when
-extreme feebleness might have excused them the toil of bearing the
-articles, they abandoned nothing until ordered to do so. “Indeed,”
-says Captain Grey, “I do not believe that there is a stronger
-instance of fidelity and perseverance than was evinced by some of
-the party, in retaining under every difficulty, possession of that
-which they had promised to preserve for me.”[337] Impeded by natural
-obstacles, their progress was tediously slow. The Hutt River was
-reached on the 5th. A few days after they touched the Bowes River,
-and then journeying through the province of Victoria, rested by the
-rivers Buller and Chapman.[338]
-
------
-
-Footnote 337:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ ii. p. 6.
-
-Footnote 338:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 1-31.
-
------
-
-On the banks of the latter a man was found missing; and Dr. Walker
-and corporal Auger were sent in search of him. They ascended the
-cliffs and tracked him to the sea; but as a large party of natives
-were near them, they gave up the pursuit, and, unobserved,
-retreated. The missing man turned up next day.[339]
-
------
-
-Footnote 339:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 31-37.
-
------
-
-While this party was out, corporal Coles, who was posted as sentry
-on a high terrace difficult of access, saw natives on the opposite
-cliffs brandishing their spears in the manner they do before a
-fight. Captain Grey clambered up the height, but as he could not
-make them out, he thought Coles had made a mistake. “When I told him
-this,” writes the Captain, “he merely said, Look there, then, sir,”
-and pointed to the top of Mount Fairfax. There, indeed, they were,
-going through a series of enigmatical ceremonies. The disposition
-which the Captain made of his men, being observed by the natives, at
-first excited them to furious gestures, but by degrees, they calmed
-down and suddenly withdrew. “The British soldiers and sailors with
-me,” proceeds the chief, “were surprisingly calm.”[340]
-
------
-
-Footnote 340:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 31-33.
-
------
-
-The Greenough River was reached on the 8th April. Here some of the
-men became sullen and would not proceed. In the mean time corporal
-Auger went alone to search for water, and soon finding it, the party
-was moved to the stream. Revived in spirits by the supply, all
-readily resumed the march, and before nightfall, had travelled seven
-miles further on their journey.[341] But the wish for short marches
-and long halts which prevailed from the first, and in which Dr.
-Walker coincided, was now exhibited in discontent. The Captain,
-however, wisely persisted in following his own plan. On the 9th
-April the want of water was much felt; and late in the day corporals
-Auger and Coles and three others went in search of some. They had
-made about seven miles, “when the keen eye of Coles,” says the
-Captain, “discovered a beautiful spring under a hill, which was then
-named the Water Peak.” Why this designation? Indebted to the
-corporal for finding the spring, it would not surely have been
-irrelevant to associate the humble name of the faithful discoverer
-with this interesting feature of the hard journey. In returning to
-the party, they wandered over a rough country full of crevices,
-sustaining some serious falls, and, being benighted, did not reach
-their companions till the next morning.[342]
-
------
-
-Footnote 341:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ ii. p. 37.
-
-Footnote 342:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 40-44.
-
------
-
-So great had the disaffection become about short marches, that the
-Captain resolved to adopt a course to settle the question. About
-seventy miles only had been marched, and six or seven pounds of
-flour were all that was left to each person. All were hourly losing
-strength and energy, and suffering from stiffened limbs. To delay
-under such circumstances was sure to bring with it wants and trials
-of the most distressing nature. The Captain, therefore, determined
-to proceed by forced journeys. “It was evident,” he writes, “that
-those men who, during our late toils, had shown themselves the most
-capable of enduring hardships, privations, and the fatigue of long
-and rapid marches, were those best suited for the service destined
-for them.” Among the five selected to accompany him were corporals
-Auger and Coles, whose force of character and disciplinary habits
-made them fit examples for imitation in so forlorn an extremity. Dr.
-Walker’s party consisted of five men, and himself as the chief. Mr.
-Frederick Smith was with the slow walkers. The separation took place
-on the 10th April.[343]
-
------
-
-Footnote 343:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 45-52.
-
------
-
-The Arrowsmith River was gained by Captain Grey and his steady men
-on the 11th, and a further march of forty-six miles brought them on
-the 13th to Gairdner’s Range. On the 14th, they reached the Hill
-River, and after a long journey, halted at a pool, where they each
-cooked two table-spoonsful of flour in about a pint of thick water
-into a mess they termed _soup_. This, with a few nuts from the zamia
-tree, formed their day’s repast. On this scanty fare they trudged
-along at a smart pace, over an arid and sterile tract of country,
-groaning from pain and fatigue. The sun, too, was intensely hot, and
-all grew faint for want of water. Gaining the course of a parched-up
-stream, it was called the “Smith” River. Many holes like wells were
-in its bottom, inviting search and promising success; but all were
-cruelly dry, and the very stones over which the water once had
-gushed, were blanched or blackened with long exposure to a burning
-sun. Now their weary days only passed to be succeeded by sleepless
-and toilsome nights. Almost perishing with thirst, they wandered
-like wild men even in the dark hours of night, from swamp to swamp,
-digging holes in a vain search. For two days and two nights they had
-not tasted a single drop of water or food of any kind; and on the
-17th, as they moved slowly on with weak and husky voices, they
-moistened their mouths by sucking a few drops of dew from the shrubs
-and reeds. So worn out were they all, that now they could only walk
-a few hundred yards at a time; but about two o’clock in the
-afternoon they were so completely exhausted, it was impossible to
-move them. The sun was then very oppressive, and the groans of the
-men were painful in the extreme. Some had fruitlessly essayed to
-obtain relief to their parched throats by chewing the laces and
-fragments of the tops of their ankle boots; but now the “last sad
-and revolting resource of thirst was upon them—they were driven to
-drink their own ——!”[344]
-
------
-
-Footnote 344:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ ii. p. 54-72.
-
------
-
-Reduced to the last degree of weakness and want, Captain Grey, in
-this desperate crisis, resolved to proceed southward, and never to
-halt until he dropped or reached water; and if any of the party fell
-behind, not to wait for them, but to go on until he slaked his own
-thirst, and then to return with assistance to them. Upon all he
-called to exert their utmost energies and make a last struggle for
-their lives. Every superfluous article was now thrown away, and the
-very valuable sextant, carried in turns by corporals Coles and
-Auger, was also abandoned. In sad procession the sufferers reeled on
-with wild and haggard looks; and though reason with some had begun
-to hold but a very slight influence, discipline was rigidly
-maintained, and not a complaint escaped them. At length, after
-suffering intense thirst for three days and two nights, performing
-severe marches under a scorching sun, the delighted travellers,
-finding a small hole of moist mud, each as he came up cast his
-wearied and aching limbs beside the hole, and, thanking God,
-greedily swallowed the liquid.[345]
-
------
-
-Footnote 345:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ ii. p. 77-81.
-
------
-
-Almost in a state of stupefaction the men lay down by the pool,
-watching with straining eye-balls until they again saw a little mud
-in it, which they eagerly licked up. Pigeons and cockatoos in
-numbers came to drink of the spring, but the gaunt wayfarers
-forestalling them had consumed the supply. Above, hovered birds in
-tempting flocks while the travellers by the “lone pool” were
-starving. Not an arm was strong enough to bring one down. The gun
-was partially raised, but the tremor of the effort rendered the
-attempt altogether hopeless. Each now turned to his own little
-store, and cooking a spoonful of flour, mixed with the black liquid,
-gratefully ate it. All sense of smell and taste had gone, and a
-repast of mud was as palatable as a custard. Next day, April the
-18th, quitting the memorable pool, they traversed a very hilly and
-densely-wooded country, and finding excellent water, made,
-notwithstanding their extreme feebleness, an incredibly long march.
-At night they lay down exposed to heavy rain, and, as a piece of
-torn and shredded blanket between two was their only covering, their
-situation was one of extreme wretchedness and suffering.[346] During
-these wanderings, Auger found intervals in which his spirits were
-sufficiently buoyant to encourage him to unpack his needles and
-thread, and to do his best—being only an improvised tailor—to mend
-the gaping rents and fretted fractures in the Captain’s tattered
-costume.[347]
-
------
-
-Footnote 346:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 81-87.
-
-Footnote 347:
-
- Lady Thomas, the mother of the chief, heard of these thoughtful
- attentions exercised under such trying circumstances, and on the
- traveller being introduced to her, she acknowledged his kindness
- with no little emotion, and marked her grateful appreciation of it
- by a suitable gift.
-
------
-
-On the 19th, the exhausted travellers were in motion again, but
-completely crippled from the cold of the night. “Corporal Coles,”
-writes the Captain, “my faithful and tried companion in all my
-wanderings, could scarcely crawl along. The flesh was completely
-torn away from one of his heels; and the irritation caused by this
-had produced a large swelling in the groin. Nothing but his own
-strong fortitude, aided by the encouragement given him by myself and
-his comrades, could have made him move under his great agony.”[348]
-Twenty-one miles the party marched that day without food, and only
-gave up when the darkness closed in upon them. A night of appalling
-misery succeeded, for the teeming rain drenched them as they lay;
-and the following morning, wasted and weak, with rigid limbs and
-shivering bodies, they could only, by extraordinary efforts, push
-themselves along. Life was scarcely worth the effort it cost to
-move. Coles was in a dreadful state, staggering on like a drunken
-man reduced to the last extremity of human endurance. It required
-fortunately but a few more desperate struggles to succeed; all
-therefore buoyed up their spirits, for, in their deep despair, a
-flickering hope still remained; and on the 21st April the five
-exemplary adventurers under their captain, entered Perth miserable
-objects of emaciation and prostration.[349] Here ended their toils,
-discouragements, and privations; and here they were tended with the
-best medical skill that the settlement could command.[350]
-
------
-
-Footnote 348:
-
- ‘Grey’s Travels,’ ii. p. 87.
-
-Footnote 349:
-
- Ibid., ii. p. 88-97.
-
-Footnote 350:
-
- Both received 1_s._ a-day each working pay, and for their good and
- enterprising conduct a gratuity of 10_l._ from the Secretary of
- State for the Colonies.
-
------
-
-Worn as he was, Auger started again the next day with a party under
-Lieutenant Mortimer to search for the lagging travellers left with
-Dr. Walker, and was out a fortnight. Driven by want of provisions
-the mission returned to Perth on the 6th May, bringing with it one
-of the missing men. In the following morning the corporal was again
-afoot with a second party under Mr. Roe, the surveyor-general of the
-province. Big-boned, broad and unbending, though ailing, attenuated
-and of melancholy aspect, he marched for eleven more days,
-re-entering the settlement on the 21st May with Mr. Spofforth, the
-companion traveller of Mr. Roe. The search was successful; four of
-the adventurers were taken into Perth, and the starved remains of
-the last were buried in a sand-hill. After sleeping upwards of 400
-nights in the open air and suffering hardships of extreme severity,
-it seems strange that Auger, footsore and tired, should not have
-been allowed a horse, as some of the party were, upon which to
-travel in these concluding services; and it is even more surprising
-that Captain Grey, in furnishing the details of these secondary
-expeditions, should have suppressed all allusion to the presence of
-the corporal, who deserved, for his spirit and endurance, most
-honourable mention.
-
-Months passed away before the two corporals regained their health,
-when, in February, 1840, they proceeded to South Australia. Corporal
-Coles joined the detachment of the corps at Port Adelaide; and
-corporal Auger landed at Woolwich in September, and was soon
-afterwards discharged by purchase.[351] Coles remained in the corps
-till June, 1843, when he was pensioned on 1s. a-day, in consequence
-of the loss of the fingers of his right hand and the forefinger of
-his left, occasioned by the accidental explosion of a carronade,
-which he was firing in honour of the birth of the Duke of Cornwall.
-Captain Grey was then Governor of South Australia, and he at once
-nominated his faithful companion and servant to a lucrative
-government appointment in the colony, presenting him also, at great
-cost, with a set of fingers fitted to his hand, which were so
-beautiful in their mechanism and accurate in their working, that he
-could pick up a button or a sixpence with pleasing facility.
-
------
-
-Footnote 351:
-
- Broken down by the service Auger felt it necessary to seek repose
- in civil life. When sufficiently restored he was engaged to hold a
- responsible situation in the Pimlico wheel factory, by Octavius
- Smith, Esq., of Thames Bank, the father of poor Mr. Frederick
- Smith, who was one of the expedition. This young gentleman offered
- a noble example of courage, patience, and resignation, but his
- delicate and shattered constitution not giving him strength to
- keep up in the forced marches of his chief, he was left, in the
- painful separation on the 10th April, with the slow marchers under
- Dr. Walker, and perished in the bush from want and exhaustion, at
- the tender age of nineteen.
-
- Captain, now Sir George Grey, on visiting England in 1854, most
- kindly sought for Auger. Naturally the meeting awakened
- reminiscences of the New Holland struggles; and the chief, at
- parting, presented his corporal with an elegant silver teapot and
- stand, bearing this simple but expressive inscription:—“Sir George
- Grey to his old follower, Richard Auger, August, 1854.”
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1839.
-
-Services of the detachment in Spain—Last party of the artillery on
- the survey—Survey of South Australia—Inspection at Limerick by Sir
- William Macbean—Triangulation of north of Scotland—Also of the
- Clyde—Pontoons by sergeant Hopkins—Augmentation of the corps—Also
- of the survey companies—Supernumerary rank annulled—Tithe surveys;
- quality of work executed on them by discharged sappers;
- efficient surveys of sergeant Douli—Increase of survey
- pay—Staff appointments on the survey—Responsibility of
- quartermaster-sergeant M‘Kay—Colonel Colby’s classes—Based upon
- particular attainments—Disputed territory in the State of
- Maine—Movements and services of the party employed in its
- survey; intrepidity of corporal M‘Queen—Experiments with the
- diving-bell—Also with the voltaic battery—Improvement in the
- priming-wires by Captain Sandham; sergeant-major Jones’s
- waterproof composition and imitation fuses—Demolition and removal
- of the wreck of the ‘Royal George’—Organization of detachment
- employed in the operation—Emulation of parties—Success of the
- divers; labours of the sappers—Diving bell abandoned—Accident to
- private Brabant—Fearlessness of Corporal Harris in unloading the
- gunpowder from the cylinders—Hazardous duty in soldering the
- loading-hole of the cylinder—First sapper helmet divers—Conduct
- and exertions of the detachment.
-
-
-The detachment in Spain was not called upon during the year to take
-part in any active operation. Its services were, therefore, confined
-to the works. At Passages the men performed several duties connected
-with the squadron; and in addition to fitting up Her Majesty’s ship
-‘Nightingale’ for stores, made various essential alterations and
-fitments in Lord John Hay’s vessel, the ‘North Star.’ Sections of
-the detachment were for months at Aquirre completing the
-construction of a redoubt and magazine, and repairing the fortified
-house there, and building a barrack and magazine at Cachola Fort on
-the Hernani road. Others were also occupied for a period in fitting
-up the hospital at San Sebastian, repairing the barracks of the
-royal artillery and royal marines, and attending to the security of
-the different forts in front of the fortress.
-
-A detachment of the artillery had, ever since the commencement of
-the national survey, been employed on that duty, whose numbers, by
-degrees, were reduced to five non-commissioned officers and
-privates. This year saw the last of that regiment on the survey, for
-the men alluded to were transferred to the corps on the 1st April.
-
-On the 20th September, one sergeant, two corporals, and twelve
-privates landed at Port Adelaide, South Australia, from the
-‘Recovery’ emigrant ship. The royal authority for the organization
-of this party to carry out the surveys of the colony, under the
-direction of Captain E. C. Frome, royal engineers, was dated 2nd
-July, 1839. Lord Normanby, the Secretary of State for the Colonies,
-at the instance of the South Australian Commissioners, recommended
-the measure. By this addition, the corps was increased from 1,048 to
-1,063 of all ranks. The party was composed of men chiefly from the
-survey, married, with families, and well adapted for the service of
-the settlement. Soon the men were dispersed over a wide extent of
-the province, surveying a wild unoccupied territory, and also in
-setting off and surveying blocks of land for the emigrants. The duty
-was not without its trials; and for months the surveyors obtained no
-better shelter than the bush, the shade of some bold cliff, or the
-cover of a frail canvas tent. In 1844, when it became indispensable
-to effect some changes in the surveying department and in the mode
-of its action, in consequence of the increased population of the
-colony and its great inland distribution, his Excellency Captain G.
-Grey expressed before the Legislative Council his sense of the
-accuracy and ability with which the detachment had conducted the
-surveys, and added, that no greater efficiency could be desired in
-effecting the trigonometrical survey than that displayed in their
-labours.[352] Some of the party were constantly at Port Adelaide
-engaged in the contingent duties of the station, such as working at
-their trades, drawing, &c., and in superintendence. At first all
-expenses were borne by the Commissioners, but eventually they were
-defrayed from the colonial revenue. The working pay of the party
-continues to range between 1_s._ and 5_s._ a-day each, exclusive of
-regimental allowances and rations. The sergeant in charge receives
-the highest rate, and the privates seldom less than 2_s._ a-day
-each.
-
------
-
-Footnote 352:
-
- ‘South Australian Register,’ August 24, 1844.
-
------
-
-On the 23rd May, the sixteenth company under the command of Captain
-Stotherd, R.E., was inspected at Limerick by Major-General Sir
-William Macbean, and commended by the General for their soldier-like
-conduct and appearance.[353]
-
------
-
-Footnote 353:
-
- ‘Limerick Chronicle,’ 25th May, 1839.
-
------
-
-One corporal and twenty privates were detached in May under
-Lieutenant Robinson, R.E., to the north of Scotland, and continued
-on the trigonometrical survey of that portion of the country until
-late in December, when they rejoined their companies.
-
-Captain A. Henderson, having with him one corporal and six privates,
-was employed in the secondary triangulation of the Clyde from May to
-the 10th October.
-
-At the summer examination of the gentleman cadets at Sandhurst,
-there was “exhibited a pontoon raft of very ingenious construction,
-made by the sappers employed at the college under the direction of
-sergeant John Hopkins.” The raft was supported on two wicker boats
-formed after the fashion of the old Welsh coracle, covered with
-waterproof canvas, “each being ten feet long by three feet wide, and
-two feet three inches deep. The buoyancy and firmness of the raft
-were such as to show, that by giving a small additional length to
-the coracles, it might be rendered capable of bearing field
-artillery, and it was so light as to be swiftly impelled by a pair
-of oars. The experiment was extremely satisfactory, and proved that
-a very valuable resource in the field might be found in such
-constructions for passing rivers.”[354] On several occasions during
-the term the detachment were out day and night extinguishing
-fires—the work of incendiaries—in the plantations near the college,
-and their effectual exertions prevented the destruction of much of
-the crown property. Sergeant Hopkins was highly praised for his
-activity and intelligence in the practical work of instruction, and
-corporal Robert Hearnden for his skill in the construction of
-revetments.
-
------
-
-Footnote 354:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii. 1839, p. 420.
-
------
-
-By the authority of a royal warrant dated 3rd July, 1838, a company
-of eighty-nine strong, numbered the tenth, was added to the corps on
-the 1st July, 1839, which increased the establishment from 1,063 to
-1,152 of all ranks. The formation of this company was occasioned by
-the removal in the previous year of a company from home duty to the
-Canadas.
-
-In 1838 the Government threw the tithe surveys in England into the
-hands of contractors, whereby the parishes were burdened with an
-expense of 9_d._ an acre, while the survey executed by the Ordnance
-cost but little more than half the sum. The higher price thus paid
-to the contractors, enabled them to attract to their employment
-civil assistants trained by the Ordnance, to do their work. Many
-resignations of superior surveyors and draughtsmen were therefore
-the result, and so great a loss from a single class, necessarily
-deferred the completion of a large portion of surveyed work. To
-provide against injury from any similar contingency, a warrant dated
-2nd July, 1839, authorized an augmentation of two sergeants, two
-corporals, two second corporals, and ten privates to each survey
-company, which, for the three companies devoted to that service,
-gave an increase of forty-eight men, making the total sapper
-establishment on the survey amount to—
-
- Col-Sergts. Sergts. Corporals. 2nd Bug. Privates. Total.
- Corpls.
-
- 3 15 18 18 6 255 315
-
-By this augmentation, the corps was raised from a total of 1,152 to
-1,200.
-
-At this period, the survey companies were generally employed on
-confidential duties and dispersed over a vast extent of country;
-while most of the non-commissioned officers and many of the privates
-were in charge of parties, performing duties which required the
-exercise of great judgment and discretion. The additional permanent
-rank was granted to invest the non-commissioned officers with more
-weight and authority among their parties, and to supersede recourse
-to the anomalous expedient of supernumerary promotion.
-
-The same reason which diminished the civil strength of the national
-survey, induced a disposition among the best soldiers of the corps
-on that duty to purchase their discharge. Several quitted during the
-tithe survey mania,[355] and the vacancies in the three companies by
-this and other means, showed that encouragement was wanted to
-influence them to continue in the service. To afford this, Colonel
-Colby obtained the power on the 16th August, 1839, to award working
-pay to the royal sappers and miners under his command, to the
-maximum of 3_s._ a-day, according to individual merit and exertion,
-in addition to their regimental pay and allowances.
-
-This, however, was not regarded by Colonel Colby as sufficient to
-meet the emergency. It was hopeless for him to compete in
-pecuniary payments with the expensive parochial surveys of
-England, and he therefore asked for two military rewards in
-addition to the augmented working pay. These were the permanent
-rank and pay of one sergeant-major and one quartermaster-sergeant.
-But the Master-General did not view the matter in the same light
-as the Colonel, and only consented to the appointment of an acting
-sergeant-major with the pay of the rank. This Colonel Colby did
-not consider an adequate distinction, and he never availed himself
-of it.[356]
-
------
-
-Footnote 355:
-
- Several of those who quitted obtained ready employment on these
- surveys, and their maps in all cases were of the first class. Mr.
- Chadwick, in his report to the Poor-Law Commissioners, compared
- the “non-efficiency of persons appointed to make surveys under the
- Tithe Commutation and Parochial Assessment Acts, with those
- executed by privates and non-commissioned officers of the sappers
- and miners. Out of 1,700 first-class maps, not more than one-half
- displayed qualifications for the execution of public surveys
- without superintendence. Amongst the most satisfactory surveys
- were those executed by a retired sergeant of the corps”—Alexander
- Doull.—‘British Almanac and Companion,’ 1843, p. 38.
-
-Footnote 356:
-
- In December, 1834, James M‘Kay was appointed acting
- quartermaster-sergeant with the pay of the rank. Entrusted with
- the care and issue of the engravings of the survey, more than
- 180,000 passed through his hands, amounting in value to
- 35,500_l._, the accounts for which, rendered half-yearly to the
- Irish Government, were never found to contain a single error. So
- extensive a responsibility rarely falls to a non-commissioned
- officer. Upwards of forty years he served in the corps, and, for
- his merits, received a gratuity and medal. He was discharged in
- July, 1844, with a pension of 2_s._ 4_d._ a-day, and afterwards
- obtained a quiet unpretending situation at Birmingham, where his
- business habits made him of essential service in the promotion of
- a scheme for a loan society on liberal principles.
-
------
-
-In July, 1839, before the increased working pay was granted, the
-following was the distribution of the companies on the survey
-according to classes.
-
- s. d. No.
- Receiving less than 1 0 a-day 19
- ” 1 0 ” 25
- { 1st 1 1 ” 15
- { 2nd 1 2 ” 12
- { 3rd 1 3 ” 17
- { 4th 1 4 ” 17
- { 5th 1 5 ” 24
- Colonel Colby’s { 6th 1 6 ” 26
- Classes. { { 1 7 ” 20
- { A { 1 8 ” 17
- { { 1 9 ” 5
- { { 1 10 ” 3
- { B { 1 11 ” 1
- { { 2 0 ” 5
- ——
- 206 [357]
-
-The qualifications demanded of surveyors to render them deserving of
-advancement were as follows:—
-
- _Class 1st._—To be capable of surveying for content—flat
- country.
-
- _Class 2nd._—Surveying for content—hilly country, including the
- use of the theodolite, taking the horizontal and vertical
- angles, as well as reducing the lines to the horizontal planes
- of the links on the arch.
-
- _Class 3rd._—Competent to register angles and distances, and to
- make a content plot.
-
- _Class 4th._—Able to compute areas, and horizontal and vertical
- distances and triangles.
-
- _Class 5th._—Able to lay out town lands or parishes for content
- with skill, so as to prevent confusion or unnecessary labour
- in the subsequent measurements.
-
- _Class 6th._—Fully acquainted with every branch of content
- surveying, and capable of directing parties of content
- surveyors.
-
- _Class_ A.—Competent to survey and plot roads, &c.
-
- _Class_ B—Competent to draw plans.
-
------
-
-Footnote 357:
-
- The above detail does not exhibit a true exposition of the
- acquirements and usefulness of the survey companies, as many of
- those not advanced to the classes, had been reduced from the
- higher to the lower rates for irregularity; and others, on the
- higher rates, were not advanced as soon as their qualifications
- merited, it being a principle with the Colonel, not to exhaust the
- limited power he possessed of awarding working pay, because he
- wisely considered nothing was more discouraging to human exertions
- than the knowledge, that those whose duty it was to reward, had no
- further power to grant them encouragement.
-
------
-
-In all the classes, every man was expected to do his work
-accurately; and if, in addition, he showed rapidity with correctness
-and neatness, special encouragement was given to such sappers by the
-grant of a proportional allowance.
-
-Second-corporal Robert Hearnden and two lance-corporals were
-attached on the 9th July to Colonel Mudge, R.E., and Mr.
-Featherstonhaugh, to assist in the topographical survey of the
-disputed territory in the state of Maine, with a view to the
-settlement of the boundary question. The sappers were dressed in
-plain clothes, suitable to the climate; and after a brief stay at
-New York, and subsequently at Boston, entered Fredericton on the
-19th August. Sixty-two canoes were hired for the service of the
-commission, and about 100 men, chiefly Indians, to man them.
-Lance-corporal William McGregor was left at the observatory at the
-Grand Falls, St. John’s; and on every day, at intervals of two
-hours, registered the indications of the five different barometers
-placed in his charge. Corporal Hearnden and lance-corporal John
-McQueen were employed with the Commissioners; and, in tracing the
-sources of the rivers and finding the heights of land, aided in
-registering the results of the instruments used to determine their
-altitudes. This employment necessarily kept them much afloat; they
-moved daily to reconnoitre; and in doing so, the stores and
-equipage, for which they were responsible, were invariably sent
-onwards under their charge. At night they slept in tents by the
-shores of the streams where their day’s labour ended, and in winter
-were much exposed to great inclemency of weather and sometimes
-personal danger. Once corporal McQueen, under circumstances of
-peculiar peril, saved from drowning a servant of one of the
-commissioners, and held him with his powerful arm, by the collar, at
-the side of the canoe for about an hour, until he reached land. The
-canoe at the time was crossing the first lake on the Allagash, about
-three miles broad, and was freighted with baggage. Had he taken the
-sufferer into the canoe it would have foundered, as it was then sunk
-in the water to the gunwale. Corporal McQueen also met with personal
-misfortune in the loss by fire of his necessaries. Late in November
-the party reached Fredericton, and arrived at Woolwich on the 24th
-January, 1840. Each received 1_s._ a-day working pay, and as a
-reward for having performed their duties in a satisfactory manner, a
-gratuity of 10_l._
-
-Previously to undertaking the destruction of the wreck of the ‘Royal
-George,’ at Spithead, Colonel Pasley made various experiments with
-the diving-bell. The common form was rectangular, and proved under
-certain circumstances very dangerous. The diving-bell in Chatham
-dockyard was fitted up by carpenters of the corps, and when
-completed, resembled in its horizontal section, that of a boat
-twelve and a half feet long, and four and a half broad.[358] On the
-14th May the altered bell was tried from the ‘Anson,’ 72, in the
-Medway, near Gillingham. Captain M. Williams, R.E., was the
-executive officer: he had with him a party of the corps and some
-riggers, &c., to work the bell. Sergeant-major Jones was the first
-man of the sappers to enter it, and on that day the experiments
-fully proved its efficacy for hazardous service. Colonel Pasley
-thereupon determined to use it at Spithead.[359]
-
------
-
-Footnote 358:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i, 1840, p. 74.
-
-Footnote 359:
-
- Ibid., 1840, p. 74.
-
------
-
-In the experiments which from time to time were made with the
-voltaic battery, serjeant-major Jones was always appointed to
-assist. Colonel Pasley had a high opinion of his experience, and of
-the quickness with which he saw a difficulty and proposed a remedy.
-The operation of passing the priming wires through water into the
-bursting charges of powder, was brought to perfection by Captain
-Sandham, of the royal engineers. Hitherto tape had been wrapped all
-round the priming wires, and paid over the outside with waterproof
-composition, leaving the inside of the tapes, and the wires embraced
-by them, quite clean, “which formed two circular open joints, and
-therefore was rather a curious sort of connexion.” But the improved
-arrangement consisted in adopting the “expedient of smearing over or
-saturating with sergeant-major Jones' waterproof composition, the
-wires themselves, as well as every other part of the other materials
-used in this junction, whether tape, thread, hemp, twine, wooden
-plugs, and caps to prevent contact with the leaden pipe in which the
-priming apparatus was inclosed, or canvas tops applied over the
-wooden cap which served to cement it to the outside of the cylinder
-containing the great charge.” In the judicious use of that valuable
-composition, very extraordinary proofs of its excellence afterwards
-came to light in the operations at Spithead.[360]
-
------
-
-Footnote 360:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 76. “The sergeant-major’s
- composition was simply pitch softened by bees'-wax and tallow. He
- had tried a great number of experiments for ascertaining the best
- sort of waterproof composition for bags of gunpowder in 1832, when
- Bickford’s fuses were first used by the corps at Chatham. He also
- at the same period discovered the means for imitating _Bickford’s
- fuses_ in an efficient manner. His _imitation_ fuses, however,
- were not precisely the same, as Bickford’s fuses were evidently
- made by machinery.”—‘United Service Journal,’ ii. 1839, p.
- 192-193.
-
------
-
-The ‘Royal George,’ a first-rate man-of-war of 100 guns, was overset
-at Spithead June 28th, 1782,[361] and for nearly sixty years, that
-leviathan wreck had been lying in the roadstead, a danger to
-shipping. Several enterprising individuals had attempted or proposed
-to raise or remove it, but with unavailing results. At length
-Colonel Pasley undertook the task, and in a few summers, by means of
-gunpowder, effected its entire demolition and removal. Many guns had
-been previously recovered, but the number still at the bottom was
-estimated in value at more than 5,000_l._
-
------
-
-Footnote 361:
-
- By this catastrophe, Admiral Kempenfeldt and a crew of many
- hundreds of seamen, with nearly 100 women and 200 Jews, then on
- board, perished.—‘Haydn’s Dates.’
-
------
-
-Under the auspices of the Admiralty, Colonel Pasley repaired to
-Portsmouth from Chatham with the necessary stores and a detachment
-of the corps, consisting of sergeant-major Jenkin Jones, one bugler,
-a clerk, and thirteen rank and file under the command of Captain M.
-Williams, of the corps, who was afterwards relieved by Lieutenant J.
-F. A. Symonds, royal engineers. The rank and file comprised a
-collar-maker and a cooper, with a proportion of carpenters,
-blacksmiths, and tinmen. After being removed from the ‘Queen,’ navy
-lighter on the 20th August, to the ‘Success,’ frigate hulk, then
-anchored near the wreck, operations commenced on the 21st, and were
-continued with diligence till the 4th November. They were then
-suspended till the return of the summer. During the service, the
-sappers, and the seamen, marines, &c., were divided into two squads,
-and attached to two lumps moored about 100 fathoms apart, with the
-wreck between them. From these lumps the work was usually carried
-on. Each lump had its own diver. Lieutenant Symonds directed the
-operations of one, and sergeant-major Jones the other. “Thus a
-friendly emulation took place between the whole of the men
-employed,” each party working for the success of its own diver, “and
-the divers themselves being no less anxious to surpass each
-other.”[362]
-
------
-
-Footnote 362:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 164.
-
------
-
-Two of the great explosions failed, but two succeeded, besides a
-vast number of smaller ones, which shook the wreck and opened its
-sides and cleared its decks. The labour consequent on the success of
-the divers was immense, and the recovery of articles and guns gave
-promise of realizing more than sufficient to cover the outlay in
-carrying on the work. The more particular duties of the sappers did
-not prevent them taking a full share of the labour at the capstan
-and the ropes. When not employed in the general duties of the
-operation, they were confined to the performance of special ones;
-such as preparing the various explosions, managing the voltaic
-battery and apparatus, and repairing the latter when needed. “They
-also repaired the diving-dresses, and did all the coopers',
-blacksmiths', and carpenters' work necessary, including the fitting
-up and occasional repairs to launches used for receiving the
-materials.” In all these duties they were found particularly
-useful.[363]
-
------
-
-Footnote 363:
-
- Ibid., i. 1840, p. 338.
-
------
-
-When Mr. Dewar, the only bell-diver, was discharged, it became
-necessary to train volunteers to succeed him. Two men of the
-detachment readily offered to try the service. These were corporal
-David Harris and private William Reid. On the 27th August, with
-Colonel Pasley and Lieutenant Symonds, they entered the bell, and
-twice were lowered, the second time with the intention of going down
-on the wreck; but before they had descended low enough, a pleasure
-yacht having run foul of the lump from which the bell was being
-lowered, it was in consequence hauled up, as every man was wanted to
-assist in saving the yacht.
-
-The diving-bell was employed a second time on the 4th September,
-with lance-corporal Harris and private John Skelton, as the
-sub-marine operators. When the vessel had descended about eight
-fathoms, the message-board and caution-line got entangled, and the
-divers were consequently hauled to the surface. A mishap of this
-kind would have discouraged some beginners, but spirited and
-willing, they only cared to succeed, and down again they went,
-reaching the bottom in little more than fourteen fathoms. As,
-however, no less than two and a-half feet of water had entered the
-bell, it was rendered inefficacious for any useful result. Owing to
-50 men, hardy seamen and marines from the ‘Pique’ frigate, working
-the capstan and machinery, the descent was accomplished in ten and
-a-half minutes, and the re-ascent in eight and a-half; but when only
-30 men were employed on the former occasion, the ascent went through
-the insufferably tedious period of 27 minutes. After these trials,
-the diving-bell, which from its unwieldy weight required no less
-than forty-nine men to be employed in various ways to raise it, was
-discarded and sent into Portsmouth dockyard.[364]
-
------
-
-Footnote 364:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 153.
-
------
-
-On the 5th September a large wrought iron cylinder filled with
-powder to be fired against the wreck, was found to have a small leak
-in it. “This would have been of no importance, as only a few pounds
-of powder were thereby spoiled; but when the whole of the powder was
-ordered to be emptied out that the hole might be repaired,
-unfortunately, the operation was carelessly executed,” inasmuch as
-water which should have been poured into the cylinder was not done.
-When, therefore, private Charles Brabant was afterwards employed in
-soldering a piece of tin over the hole, the powder still remaining
-in the cylinder blew up, and a fragment from it broke one of his
-thighs, and then indented itself in the deck. “This accident was
-much regretted by every one, especially as the young soldier thus
-injured bore an excellent character, and was one of the most useful
-men employed, his services as a tinman being in constant
-requisition.”[365]
-
------
-
-Footnote 365:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 156. Brabant was discharged
- in April, 1841, on a pension of 6_d._ a-day. He was quite lame,
- but shortly after obtained the situation of turnkey to Maidstone
- gaol.
-
------
-
-The method adopted for unloading the powder from the cylinders when
-any was found to be damaged, and for preserving the good powder, was
-as curious as it was dangerous. “Having removed part of the outer
-casing of lead, corporal David Harris cut a hole through the side of
-the wood-work, by which, after emptying a part of its contents, he
-got _into_ the cylinder, and continually kept filling a copper
-shovel with powder, which he handed out from time to time when full.
-At those periods only could any portion of him be seen. When rising
-up in his hole he displayed a face as black as a chimney-sweep’s.”
-To knock off the powder which had become caked either by wet or
-compression, he was provided with a wooden wedge and a copper
-hammer. Every precaution was taken to prevent accident, such as
-putting out the fires, laying hides on the deck and wetting them
-occasionally, as well as working in slippers. The duty was very
-unpleasant, and required in the operation more than ordinary
-courage.[366]
-
------
-
-Footnote 366:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 320.
-
------
-
-Soldering the loading-hole of the cylinder was also a dangerous
-service. “The neck and loading-hole were of brass, in the form of an
-hour-glass, soldered to the iron-work. As the hole was to have a
-disc of metal soldered over it after the cylinder was filled with
-powder, with a plug and some inches of clay between the powder and
-the disc, Mr. Taplin, a foreman in Portsmouth dockyard, was
-requested to send one of his artificers to do it who was accustomed
-to that sort of soldering; but the man sent to do it was
-horror-struck at the idea of the thing, and declared he would not
-attempt it for a thousand pounds!” The hole was eventually soldered
-by private Skelton, though unused to the work.[367]
-
------
-
-Footnote 367:
-
- Ibid., p. 323, 324.
-
------
-
-The first helmet divers were corporal Harris and private William
-Reid,[368] who volunteered to act if required. They went down for
-trial in fifteen fathoms water near the ‘Success’ frigate one day
-when the regular divers were not required at the wreck. On another
-occasion when Hiram London had injured his hand, “corporal Harris
-went down four times to the wreck in one slack, and succeeded in
-slinging four pieces of timber, all of which were brought up.”[369]
-
------
-
-Footnote 368:
-
- A man of varied acquirements, a good surveyor, and an expert
- draughtsman and clerk, and assisted in executing the wood
- engravings in Colonel Pasley’s ‘Practical Operations of a Siege,’
- for which his name is recorded at page 76 of the first edition of
- that work. Disposed to habits of irregularity, he never received
- promotion, and was pensioned at 1_s._ a-day in January, 1850.
-
-Footnote 369:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i. 1840, p. 333.
-
------
-
-Sergeant-major Jones, it is recorded, assisted Lieutenant Symonds
-with great efficiency, “and being very nearly as skilful in the
-management of boats and application of the mechanical powers as in
-the use of gunpowder,” his services were very important. Private
-William Read[370] prepared the voltaic battery for use, assisted
-by one or two others of the detachment, and his skill and
-steadiness, at all times apparent, were more decided in moments of
-difficulty. “Private John Skelton, a blacksmith, not only did
-everything essential in his own trade, but worked as a tinman in
-soldering up the loaded cylinders, and contrived to put the
-air-pipes in good order when the attempt seemed hopeless. Being
-also one of the most active men in boats or at the capstan, when
-not employed as an artificer, he and private William Read were
-appointed lance-corporals on the conclusion of the service.”[371]
-The detachment returned to the corps at Woolwich in the ‘Medea’
-steamer on the 6th November, 1839. The working pay of the
-sergeant-major was 2s. a-day, and the rank and file 1s. a-day
-each.
-
------
-
-Footnote 370:
-
- Now sergeant-major at the royal engineer establishment, Chatham.
-
-Footnote 371:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ 1840, p. 337. A minute and faithful
- record of the operations will be found in the ‘United Service
- Journal,’ i. 1840, pp. 72-83, 149-164, 319-338.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1840.
-
-Return of the detachment from Spain—Its conduct during the
- war—Survey of the northern counties of England—Notice of
- sergeant Cottingham—Secondary triangulation of the north of
- Scotland—Increase to survey allowances—Augmentation to the
- survey companies—Renewal of survey of the disputed boundary in
- the state of Maine—Corporal Hearnden at Sandhurst—Wreck of the
- ‘Royal George;’ duties of the sappers in its removal—Exertions
- of sergeant-major Jones—The divers—An accident—Usefulness of the
- detachment engaged in the work—Boat adventure at Spithead—Andrew
- Anderson—Thomas P. Cook—Transfer of detachment from the
- Mauritius to the Cape—Survey of La Caille’s arc of meridian
- there—Detachment to Syria—Its active services, including capture
- of Acre—Reinforcement to Syria.
-
-
-The services of the sappers in Spain were of a nature similar to
-those in which they were engaged during the greater part of the
-previous year; and the diligence and ability shown in their
-execution drew repeated expressions of admiration from Lord John
-Hay. “They could turn their hands,” it is recorded, “to anything and
-everything.” Under orders from the Admiralty, the detachment,
-nineteen strong, was withdrawn from Spain and arrived at Woolwich in
-the ‘Alban’ steamer, 22nd August, 1840. Its original strength
-increased by subsequent reinforcements, reached thirty-six of all
-ranks: the difference was occasioned by the removal of invalids,
-five deaths, and one killed by falling over a precipice.
-
-Lord John Hay, in a letter to Lieutenant Vicars, R.E., parted with
-the detachment in the following eulogistic terms:—
-
-“The Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty having ordered me to
-embark the detachment of royal sappers and miners under your command
-for a passage to England, have directed me at the same time to
-convey to yourself, the officers, non-commissioned officers, and
-privates of the detachment, their lordships' marked approbation of
-the zeal, gallantry, and good conduct which have been displayed by
-them on all occasions during the long course of service in which
-they have been employed on this coast.
-
-“In communicating this expression of their lordships' satisfaction,
-I avail myself of the opportunity of again recording my thanks to
-yourself, the officers, non-commissioned officers, and privates of
-the detachment, for the zeal and gallantry with which my orders have
-at all times been carried into effect, and particularly for the
-ability displayed in the erection of the various works of defence
-entrusted to you.”
-
-At the commencement of the principal triangulation of Great Britain,
-it was carried forward more with a view to the solution of the
-astronomical problem connected with the size and figure of the earth
-than as a basis for an accurate topographical survey. In pursuance
-of this object, a series of triangles had been carried northward
-from the Isle of Wight, and continued to the north coast of
-Yorkshire in 1806; but a portion of the east of Yorkshire was still
-left without any fixed points or stations. The series went along the
-eastern edge of the Cleaveland vale; but at that time the
-mountainous country on the west of Cleaveland, and in Derbyshire,
-Westmoreland, Cumberland, Durham, and Northumberland, was
-inaccessible for trigonometrical stations from the want of roads, or
-other local approaches. These having been subsequently constructed,
-a detachment of the corps was sent in May, 1840, under Lieutenant
-Pipon, R.E., into the northern counties, to visit some stations in
-order to fix the points to expedite the topographical survey. The
-party encamped on the Great Whernside mountain near Kettlewell, and
-from this time a force of the corps has ever since been employed in
-the English surveys, gradually swelling the numbers of the latter,
-as the progress of the work in Ireland permitted their removal.[372]
-
------
-
-Footnote 372:
-
- Ambrose Cottingham was the first sergeant detached from Ireland
- for the survey of England, and he assisted in superintending a
- large force of field surveyors. It is recorded that “he performed
- this arduous and important duty in a manner highly advantageous to
- the service, and caused considerable saving of expense in that
- branch of the work.” Beyond, however, his zeal, industry, and the
- capability of keeping large bodies of men in full activity, he
- possessed no available acquirements. In April, 1844, he quitted
- the service on a pension of 1_s._ 8_d_ a-day, and having amassed
- some property by his frugality, retired to Mayfield in Sussex.
-
------
-
-For the secondary triangulation of the north of Scotland, sixteen
-rank and file were provided in May, and by the fall of the year they
-had increased to thirty-one men. From this period Scotland has
-always had a few sections of sappers employed in its national
-surveys; but of late, the numbers have swelled to some magnitude.
-
-Similar advantages as to working pay granted to the sappers in
-Ireland were extended to the detachments occupied in the surveys of
-Great Britain, to give due encouragement to their exertions. Four
-shillings a-day were also granted to non-commissioned officers
-superintending large forces of field surveyors, to cover the extra
-expenses incurred, and compensate for the labour and fatigue endured
-in the performance of this duty.
-
-On the 19th June, 1840, by order of Sir Hussey Vivian, the
-Master-General, the survey companies were increased by one sergeant,
-one corporal, and one second corporal, but to make up for this
-addition, the privates were reduced three men per company. The
-establishment for each of the three companies was therefore fixed as
-follows:—
-
- Col.-Sergts. Sergts. Corporals. 2nd Buglers. Privates. Total.
- Corpls.
-
- 1 6 7 7 2 82 105
-
-This measure was recommended by Colonel Colby because, as he
-expressed it, “the general conduct of the non-commissioned officers
-was so excellent that a selection for promotion could seldom be
-given as a reward for a special service without showing a preference
-for some class of duty to the exclusion of others equally onerous
-and well performed;” and even with this increase, a non-commissioned
-officer higher than the rank of lance-corporal, could not be spared
-to assist in the charge of the detachment on the Great Whernside
-Mountain.
-
-Second-corporal John McQueen was sent in the summer with Captain
-Broughton, R.E., and Mr. Featherstonhaugh to the disputed territory
-in North America, to aid in its reconnaissance and survey. He was
-dressed in plain clothes and wore in his girdle a brace of pistols.
-Operations commenced on the 1st August at the Grand Falls, and
-ceased for the winter on the 5th October, at which date the
-commissioners reached Quebec. Throughout this period corporal
-McQueen was in the bush. His duty, apart from the general services
-of the survey, comprised the registration of the barometers and
-thermometers every hour, often at intervals of half an hour, taking
-the bearings of the several streams, superintending the movements of
-the camp equipage and stores, and issuing the provisions.
-
-The service was not accomplished without hardship and occasional
-privation. The marching, too, was toilsome, and it was the lot of
-the corporal sometimes to struggle through swamps and ford streams
-where the exertion of swimming was necessary for his safety. The
-snow at times was deep; the cold in the morning great; but generally
-at mid-day the heat from the density of the woods was almost
-insupportable. The sandflies which infested the bush were a
-distressing nuisance; and the expedition, to protect themselves from
-swollen faces and blindness, resorted to the expedient of covering
-the face with a gauze veil, or of tying round their hats a piece of
-burning cedar, by the hostile fumes of which the stinging swarm was
-kept at bay. On the party reaching Quebec, corporal McQueen was
-quartered in the artillery barracks, and worked during the winter in
-the engineer department, preparing for the next summer expedition
-such utensils and conveniences as the experience of the past had
-proved to be desirable.
-
-Both terms at Sandhurst the detachment employed with the gentlemen
-cadets, was in charge of corporal Robert Hearnden, and being an
-active and intelligent non-commissioned officer, he acquitted
-himself extremely well. “With his own hands he completed,” says the
-official report, “the masonry of a small splinter-proof magazine,
-including a roof ingeniously constructed of tiles so arranged as to
-break joint, and imbedded in cement, which gives to the whole work
-the appearance and strength of a stone roof.” Both parties laboured
-with readiness and industry, and maintained their usual exemplary
-character. Corporal Joseph T. Meyers had been several times
-at Sandhurst, and was found so assiduous and deserving a
-non-commissioned officer, that the governor of the College rewarded
-him by giving him the appointment of staff-sergeant at that
-institution.[373]
-
------
-
-Footnote 373:
-
- On quitting the college became a clerk to the military prison at
- Gosport.
-
------
-
-Early in May, one bugler and twenty-two rank and file, with
-serjeant-major Jones, returned to the wreck of the ‘Royal George’ at
-Spithead, and under the executive charge of Lieutenant Symonds,
-R.E., resumed the operations which were suspended in the winter of
-the previous year. Colonel Pasley had the direction of the service.
-The duties of the sappers were similar in all respects to those
-mentioned on the former occasion, and the composition of the party
-rendered it fully equal to the varied and novel circumstances of so
-peculiar an undertaking. On the 27th October, the winter then having
-completely set in, the operations were again suspended, and the
-detachment returned to Chatham.
-
-When Lieutenant Symonds quitted early in October, sergeant-major
-Jones took charge of the service, which he managed with success, and
-was fortunate in recovering a considerable portion of the wreck.
-Throughout the season his zeal, judgment, and activity gained the
-high commendation of Colonel Pasley.
-
-Corporal David Harris was employed for several months as a diver.
-Ambitious to earn fame in the art, he rivalled by his exertions the
-professional civil divers. With exciting rapidity he sent aloft
-planks, beams, staves, iron knees, grape-shot, fragments of
-gun-carriages, abundance of sheet-lead, remnants of the galley, and
-a thousand et ceteras. It was he who ferreted into the store-room,
-and cleared out its heterogeneous contents, recovering by his zeal
-crates of brass locks, bolts, nuts, copper hoops, and axletrees. Now
-he would penetrate into a magazine, and remove its powder-barrels
-and bulls' hides; then, tearing down the decks and walls, would anon
-push into a carpenter’s shop, and surprise all hands with
-instalments of sash-frames, window-weights, plate-glass, and
-engine-hose. Into the craters formed by the large explosions he
-would fearlessly enter, and, probed on all sides by projecting spars
-and splintered beams, would drag from the abysses huge timbers and
-unwieldy masses of the wreck, that strained from their weight the
-powerful shackles and gear used to raise them on board. An entire
-32-pounder gun-carriage he also obtained; and only for the snapping
-of the slings, would have had a gun recorded to his credit. Indeed,
-it was on the way to the surface, when it dropped from the broken
-ropes and was lost for the summer. A guinea of 1768, the only one
-which saw the light during the season, was among the spoils which
-Harris had recovered. For experiment this corporal tried to dive in
-one of Bethell’s dresses, but after two or three attempts it had so
-exhausted his energies, that he was compelled to abandon its use.
-From the 29th May till the winter set in, he dived incessantly,
-except when prevented by heavy gales of wind, the strength of the
-tide, or the occasional sickness which was inseparable from so hard
-a duty. Frequently he earned as much as 4_s._ 6_d._ a-day working
-pay.
-
-Lance-corporal John Skelton, and privates Charles Symon, Richard
-Pillman Jones, Thomas Penny Cook, Joseph Ireland, and Andrew Duncan,
-also dived at intervals when available dresses offered them chances
-of engaging in the perilous service. In the journal of the
-operations Lieutenant Symonds writes—“I find but little difference
-between them and the other divers, except that the sappers work with
-a better will.” The first two of these young divers were the most
-promising. The former, moreover, from his skill and ingenuity as an
-artificer, made himself very useful, and his diligence as a workman
-was felt in various ways. Most of the delicate work connected with
-the diving-apparatus, air-pumps, voltaic-batteries, etc., in which
-approved judgment and intelligence were required, was turned out of
-the hands of this craftsman in a manner that satisfied to the utmost
-those whose lives depended upon the accuracy and completeness of his
-labours.
-
-Only one accident of a serious nature occurred: this was to private
-Andrew Duncan, who a day or two before had slung a large beam of the
-orlop-deck with knee attached, which was hove on board with great
-difficulty. He had on one of Deane’s dresses, which required the
-head and helmet to be kept upright. Losing this position he toppled
-over, and falling into a hole, the water rushed into his helmet and
-nearly drowned him. On being brought up his face was cased with mud,
-and he remained insensible for several minutes, bleeding from the
-mouth and ears. Chafing, with other simple remedies, however, soon
-restored him.
-
-Corporal William Read[374] had again the management of the voltaic
-battery, which was almost in constant use, and gave every
-satisfaction. The powder expended in the operations was 15,000 lbs.
-Innumerable were the charges fired against the wreck, none
-containing less than 18 lbs. of gunpowder, nor more than 260 lbs.
-All the privates showed the greatest energy and activity in the
-duties they were called on to perform. Both in boats and the work
-necessary for getting up the fragments of the wreck, whether at the
-windlass or capstan, &c., in the repair of the launches, the
-preparation of the charges, and the loading and unloading of the
-cylinders, they were found prompt, spirited, and efficient, and
-their example was very beneficial in exciting the emulation of the
-sailors. So well indeed had the detachment been constituted, that,
-for its numbers, it was equal to the execution of any mechanical
-service which the operations demanded. In their general duties
-privates James Hegarty and Joseph Ireland were the most
-conspicuous.[375] Exertion and ship fare made the whole party strong
-and hardy, and a few weeks roughing it on shipboard turned them out
-as weather-beaten and brawny as seamen.
-
------
-
-Footnote 374:
-
- Now sergeant-major of the royal engineer establishment.
-
-Footnote 375:
-
- ‘Corps Orders,’ Chatham, 29th October, 1840. ‘Manuscript Journal
- of the Operations.’
-
------
-
-During this season at Spithead there was a strong gale from the
-eastward, and the storm-flag was hoisted at Gosport. No boats would
-venture out, and the ‘Success’ frigate, with a part of the
-detachment on board, was in danger of parting from her anchors and
-drifting to sea. Lieutenant Symonds was on shore at the time, and
-thinking his presence necessary to secure her safety, determined to
-attempt the passage. The civil divers, accustomed to perilous boat
-service, said no boat could live in such a sea, and the Port-Admiral
-refused his permission for Lieutenant Symonds to proceed unless on
-his own responsibility. Unable from the raging storm to row out of
-the harbour, he, with four sappers, hauled the gig along shore for
-more than two miles, and when a good offing was gained, the lug-sail
-was hoisted and the boat pushed off. With the tact and sagacity of a
-skilful pilot, Lieutenant Symonds guided the gig, now skirting the
-furious wave, now skimming across its angry top, and anon lost for a
-time between the furious billows of a long, deep trough. To lessen
-the danger of the fearful venture, the men lay down in the boat for
-ballast, and pulling off their boots, used them, with noble
-exertion, in baling out the water as she shipped the sea. At length,
-to the utter amazement and joy of the party on board, the gig
-reached the frigate. Then, however, the peril was increased, for
-frequently like a log she was dashed against the hull of the vessel,
-and as frequently nearly foundered; but by the spirited exertions of
-the brave lieutenant and his intrepid crew, the boat was eventually
-secured, and all gained unhurt the deck of the ‘Success.’ Lieutenant
-Symonds then took such further precautions as were indispensable for
-the safety of the ship, and she successfully outrode the storm. The
-names of the gig’s crew were privates John Hegarty, Andrew
-Anderson,[376] Thomas P. Cook,[377] and John Campbell:[378] the two
-latter became colour-sergeants in the corps.
-
------
-
-Footnote 376:
-
- His career in the corps was somewhat eventful. A noble soldier,
- with a spirit that nothing could depress, he was often selected
- for unusual enterprises. He received a medal for the Kaffir war of
- 1846-7. Another he received, and a second-class prize of five
- pounds, for his services at the Great Exhibition. Was also
- honoured with the order of the Medjidie for his heroic conduct at
- the battle of Guirgevo, and wore a medal for the Crimea. After
- serving a period in the trenches before Sebastopol, his life was
- sacrificed to his excesses. One morning, to the deep regret of his
- officers and his comrades, he was found dead in his tent.
-
-Footnote 377:
-
- Was recorded for distinguished conduct in the Kaffir war of 1846.
- Accompanying that portion of the corps which served at Gallipoli
- and Bulgaria, he was, on account of his experience and
- soldier-like deportment, appointed sergeant-major to the
- expedition. Through sickness his strong-built frame had become so
- weak and attenuated, that when the cholera seized him he was
- carried off in a few hours. He died on board the ‘Andes,’ when
- sailing for the Crimea.
-
-Footnote 378:
-
- Will be found noted on the same page with his late comrade,
- sergeant Cook, for the determination and intelligence he displayed
- in the Kaffir war of 1846.
-
------
-
-On the completion of the citadel at the Mauritius, the half-company
-stationed there was removed on the 7th October, under the command of
-Lieutenant G. R. Hutchinson, R.E., in the ‘Isabella Blyth’ to the
-Cape of Good Hope, where it landed on the 27th of the same month.
-The chief of the work at Port Louis was executed by the sappers, in
-which privates William Reynolds and William Crawford[379] displayed
-the most skill and obtained the most credit. Four detachments had
-been sent to the Mauritius, whose united strength reached fifty of
-all ranks: of these the casualties amounted to ten deaths and one
-drowned.
-
------
-
-Footnote 379:
-
- Both were discharged from the corps by request at the Cape of Good
- Hope.
-
------
-
-Sergeant John Hemming and seven rank and file embarked at Woolwich
-on the 9th April, 1840, and landed at the Cape of Good Hope in July.
-The party was detached under Captain Henderson, R.E., to assist the
-colonial astronomer, Mr. Maclear, in the remeasurement of La
-Caille’s arc of the meridian. All were armed with rifles and
-accoutrements to protect them in a wild country, and the sergeant
-was selected to take charge of the detachment from his well-known
-steadiness and intelligence. Working pay was granted to each for his
-services, according to individual exertion and general usefulness,
-up to 3_s._ per day.
-
-A few weeks were spent in the preliminary business of adjusting the
-instruments in Cape Town, when the party, to which some men of the
-25th regiment had been added, left in September for Zwartland and
-Groenekloof, west of the Berg River. On this extensive plain the
-base was measured with the compensation bars invented by Colonel
-Colby, but as La Caille’s arc could not be identified, a new line
-very near to it was laid out and measured about seven miles in
-length, which occupied from October, 1840, to April, 1841.[380] In
-this service the party carried out the subordinate details. They
-assisted in driving the pickets and the placement of the trestles to
-sustain the bars. These were scientifically fixed by the colonial
-astronomer and Captain Henderson, aided by the sappers. Two men were
-also appointed to guard the last point of observation whilst the
-bars were being carried forward and adjusted; and another
-occasionally attended to the registration of the observations. Thus
-the work continued until the whole distance was measured. The
-delicate nature of the duty rendered it very irksome, and required
-much assiduous care in its performance. The jar of a bar simply
-would have been sufficient to cause the loss of a day’s work. Nearly
-the whole time the sappers worked from four in the morning till
-eight or nine at night. In July, 1841, the party returned to winter
-quarters.
-
------
-
-Footnote 380:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers,’ New Series, i. p. 32.
-
------
-
-By the terms of a treaty, dated 15th July, 1840, Mehemet Ali was
-required to accept certain conditions within a limited time, and, if
-he declined, the forfeiture of the pachalic of Acre and the loss of
-Egypt were to follow. Having allowed the time to elapse, offensive
-operations commenced to compel him to evacuate Syria. England being
-greatly involved in the treaty, the British Cabinet at once sent a
-fleet under Admiral Sir Robert Stopford to the coast, with which was
-a small force of the ordnance corps, to assist the troops of the
-Sultan in this service.[381]
-
------
-
-Footnote 381:
-
- ‘Prof. Papers,’ Royal Engineers, vi. p. 47.
-
------
-
-On the 7th August one sergeant and eleven rank and file embarked at
-Gibraltar on board the ‘Pique’ frigate, under Colonel Sir Charles
-Smith, Bart., R.E., for active duty with the fleet. A liberal
-assortment of intrenching and tradesmen’s tools accompanied the
-party. On the 1st September it arrived at Beirout, and a landing was
-effected on the 10th. Second-corporal John Moore[382] accompanied
-the first detachment that landed, and was present at the advanced
-position above the Dog River.
-
------
-
-Footnote 382:
-
- This non-commissioned officer afterwards broke his leg at Beirout
- in falling from the roof of the ordnance store in endeavouring to
- get access to a building adjoining it which was on fire. In
- January, 1843, he was pensioned at 1_s._ 9_d._ a-day, and
- emigrated to Canada.
-
------
-
-On the same day the sappers landed at D’Junie from the ‘Pique’
-frigate, and after occupying the lines were employed in repairing
-and improving them until the 10th October. Corporal Henry Brown and
-private John Greig[383] were in the meantime sent on in the ‘Hydra’
-steamer, and were present on the 25th and 26th September at the
-taking of Tyre and Sidon. Soon after their return to D’Junie, the
-whole party embarked in the ‘Stromboli’ steamer, and served at the
-capture of Beirout on the 10th and 11th October. On the 3rd
-November, sergeant Black and three privates were present on board
-the ‘Princess Charlotte’ at the taking of Acre, and were the first
-troops that entered that famous city. In all these operations the
-sappers were under the orders of Lieutenant Aldrich, R.E. “Their
-conduct,” writes that officer, “in their extensive and arduous
-duties, and under suffering from great sickness, has been most
-exemplary;” and again, in a despatch from Lord Palmerston, the
-approbation of Her Majesty’s Government is conveyed for the share
-the party took in the capture of Acre, and for the zeal and ability
-displayed by them in restoring the defences of the place after its
-capture.
-
------
-
-Footnote 383:
-
- Was a clever mechanic and a handsome soldier, but his constitution
- eventually gave way under the influence of the Syrian fever, and
- he died in October, 1847.
-
------
-
-A second detachment of ten rank and file arrived at Beirout on the
-13th December in the ‘Hecate’ steamer, under Lieutenant J. F. A.
-Symonds, R.E., from Woolwich, and was sent in the ‘Vesuvius’ to
-Acre, to reinforce the sappers, and to assist at the breaches,
-taking with them a supply of intrenching tools. The sapper force in
-Syria now consisted of one sergeant and twenty-one rank and file.
-
-
-
-
- 1841.
-
-Syria—Landing at Caiffa; Mount Carmel—Cave of Elijah;
- epidemic—Colour-sergeant Black—Inspection at Beirout by
- the Seraskier; return of the detachment to England—Expedition
- to the Niger—Model farm—Gori—Fever sets in; return of
- the expedition—Services of the sappers attached to it—Corporal
- Edmonds and the elephant—and the Princess—Staff-sergeant’s
- undress—Staff appointments—Wreck of the ‘Royal George’—Sergeant
- March—Sapper-divers—Curiosities—Under-water pay; means
- used to aid the divers—Speaking under water—Gallantry
- of private Skelton—Alarming accidents—Constitutional unfitness
- for diving—Boundary survey in the state of Maine—Augmentation
- to corps for Bermuda—Sandhurst; corporal Carlin’s
- services—Quartermaster-sergeant Fraser—Intrepidity of private
- Entwistle—Colonel Pasley—Efficiency of the corps—Its conduct, and
- impolicy of reducing its establishment—Sir John Jones’s opinion of
- the sappers—And also the Rev. G. R. Gleig’s.
-
-
-A portion of the detachment in Syria was removed from Acre to Jaffa
-on the 11th January. About this time, lance-corporal Hugh Smith[384]
-accompanied Lieutenant Aldrich to Medjel. From the 23rd February to
-the 12th April, three of the party from Acre assisted Lieutenants
-Aldrich and Symonds in the survey of Jerusalem and Sidon, halting on
-the route at Jericho, Nablous, and Safed. Sergeant Black was left in
-charge of the restorations at Acre; but owing to the plague which
-had been so fatal to the royal marines, he was soon after removed
-with the remainder of the detachment to Jaffa, in the defensive
-occupation of which he and his men were engaged for about six weeks.
-The party then returned to Beirout, and was occupied in various
-contingent services; such as repairing the billets provided for the
-troops by the Ottoman government. Here the three men rejoined from
-Jerusalem and Sidon. All the party was subjected to much
-inconvenience from the want of those essentials in barrack furniture
-which formed no part of the inventory of a Turkish soldier’s
-accommodation; and, to supply the deficiency, the carpenters of the
-detachment made some tables, forms, and other indispensable
-utensils.
-
------
-
-Footnote 384:
-
- Was discharged in October, 1850, and pensioned at 1_s._ 9_d._
- a-day. Out of a service of thirteen years in the corps, he was
- eleven abroad, at Gibraltar, in Syria, and China. From the last
- station he returned in a distressing state of emaciation and
- weakness. There, though a sergeant, the necessities of the service
- required that he should labour at the anvil, and the skilfulness
- of his work was superior to anything that could be procured at
- Hong Kong.
-
------
-
-On the 23rd April twelve of the sappers sailed in the ‘Phœnix’
-for Caiffa, and in disembarking, under rain, the boat was swamped in
-a heavy surf. The men made the shore as best they could, but lost
-most of the public stores and their baggage. Before sunset they were
-tented on the beach, and, in a few days, the encampment was removed
-under Mount Carmel,[385] there to await the cessation of the plague,
-and afterwards to repair again to Acre to strengthen the defences.
-It was at first intended to take up a station near the convent on
-the mount, but that quarter was found to be in quarantine, on
-account of the plague being at Caiffa, only a few hundred yards off.
-No resource was left but to seek shelter under canvas, which, in a
-country subject to endemics, was very inimical to health; and that,
-combined with the circumstance of the party being detached without a
-medical officer, might have added one more calamity to the fatal
-incidents of the campaign. A quarantine cordon was therefore formed
-around the encampment, and every means adopted to prevent fever,
-from contiguity or local miasma, appearing in the tents.
-
------
-
-Footnote 385:
-
- See a representation of the encampment in the ‘Professional
- Papers, R.E.’ vi., p. 22. This was the note affixed to the first
- edition, but the plate referred to is on so small a scale, it
- would need more than the assistance of a powerful glass to
- discover the site of the tents.
-
------
-
-The sappers now took their meals in the sacred cave of Elijah—a cool
-but ill-ventilated retreat. The water at the camp was deleterious to
-health; but, after the 21st June, mountain spring-water, obtained
-three miles away, was brought for their use. In a country subject to
-plague and fever, a European holds his life by a precarious tenure:
-the detachment felt this, but bore up well, notwithstanding the
-absence of a medical officer. Dr. Zorab, a Turkish practitioner,
-made one or two professional visits to the party, and then Mr.
-Robertson, Deputy Inspector-General, voluntarily joined the camp
-from Beirout. Three weeks afterwards, he was relieved by
-Assistant-Surgeon Acton, R.N., who had scarcely commenced his duties
-when the fever attacked the party. The two men employed outside the
-cordon were the first seized with the malady, and every man of the
-party was soon under treatment. In most of the cases the seizure was
-highly dangerous, and in forty-eight hours the strongest man was
-completely prostrate. It was not until the shelter of a building for
-the sufferers could be obtained that the skill of Dr. Acton was of
-any avail. Four of the men died, and the remainder were conveyed in
-the ‘Stromboli,’ on the 10th July, to Beirout. Two more were
-invalided to England, and the other six only regained convalescence
-after a long period of illness.
-
-Constantly moving along the coast, embarking and disembarking the
-stores, made the duties of the detachment laborious; and both
-colour-sergeant William Black[386] and second-corporal Henry
-Brown[387] were promoted, in consequence of the efficient manner in
-which they executed those services, and for their zeal before the
-enemy. At one time, the engineer park in charge of the former
-consisted of 100,000 sand-bags with a proportional quantity of field
-implements and tools, and was never less than 72,000 sand-bags. He
-also issued commissariat stores to the whole camp.
-
------
-
-Footnote 386:
-
- Was pensioned at 2_s._ a-day in January, 1851. In the corps he
- served nearly twenty-four years, of which period he was seventeen
- and a-half abroad, at Corfu, the Euphrates, Gibraltar, Syria, and
- Halifax, Nova Scotia. His great merits obtained for him the grant
- of an annuity of 10_l._ a-year, and a silver medal, and an
- appointment as messenger to the commanding royal engineer’s
- office, in the London district. Through Lieutenant-Colonel
- Aldrich, his commanding-officer in Syria, he was also appointed a
- yeoman of the Queen’s Guard. The emoluments derived by him from
- these different sources, amounting to about 160_l._ a-year, with
- excellent quarters, are the hard and just earnings of a life full
- of vicissitude and devotion to the service.
-
-Footnote 387:
-
- Now a quartermaster-sergeant in the corps; and besides serving a
- second tour at Gibraltar, was present at the reduction of
- Bomarsund and the siege of Sebastopol. Is in receipt of an annuity
- of 10_l._ a-year, and wears five medals and a clasp for his active
- services.
-
------
-
-At Beirout the party was occasionally employed on the works, and
-furnished a guard for the station, in concert with the royal
-artillery. On the 1st December, the Seraskier, Selim Pacha, and
-Colonel Rose, commanding the expedition, inspected the detachment,
-and expressed themselves in a flattering manner relative to their
-services in the country. The latter, in orders, added his assurance
-that he entertained the highest sense of their zeal and efficient
-services on all occasions; and the Sultan awarded to each a medal in
-commemoration of the campaign.[388] From the inspection parade of
-the Seraskier, the detachment, reduced from twenty-two to fourteen
-men, embarked on board the ‘Thunderer,’ and landed at Malta on the
-27th December, where they passed two months in the Forts of Manoel
-and St. Elmo, and landed at Woolwich from the ‘Gorgon’ steamer on
-the 23rd March, 1842.
-
------
-
-Footnote 388:
-
- The medals were _copper_, but washed, at the expense of the
- wearers, with a preparation that gave them the appearance of
- _gold_. In 1848, the British Government awarded them silver medals
- for the same campaign.
-
------
-
-On the 20th February, one corporal and seven privates embarked with
-the expedition under the command of Captain Trotter, R.N., to the
-Niger. Its object was to explore the source of the river, to
-introduce civilisation into Africa, and to prevail on the chiefs to
-extinguish slavery. The sappers were divided into two sections: one
-was added to the crew of the ‘Albert’ steamer, and the other to the
-‘Wilberforce.’ They had been specially taught at Chatham the mode of
-blasting rock under water, with a view to removing obstructions in
-the navigation of the streams of the Niger yet unsurveyed. Five were
-men of excellent character, but three were not irreproachable in
-point of sobriety. The royal warrant sanctioning the formation of
-this special detachment is dated 7th December, 1840, and the corps
-was thereby increased from 1200 to 1208 of all ranks. The party was
-armed with rifles and bayonet-swords.
-
-Late in June the expedition reached Freetown, and, steaming along
-the coast, crossed the mouth of the Niger on the 13th August. After
-passing the Bight of Benin, the steamers anchored off Ibu on the
-26th; and the king, Obi, with the heir-apparent, Chikuna, and a vast
-retinue, visited the ‘Albert.’
-
-On the 2nd September the expedition was off Iddah. To the king, or
-Attàh of Egarrah, a visit was paid by Captain Trotter. The sappers
-and seamen formed the guard of honour. Corporal Edmonds commanded,
-and he and all the men were grotesquely habited and decorated, to
-suit the barbaric taste of his majesty.
-
-Near the confluence of the rivers Niger and Tchadda were landed the
-wooden houses to form the model farm on Mount Stirling, purchased
-from the King of Egarrah for 700,000 cowries. The Kroomen and seamen
-were the labourers in this service, and the sappers superintended
-the construction of the farm and the erection of the magnificent
-tent used in the Eglintoun tournament. The manipulation of the
-houses was prepared in England, leaving nothing to do but to put the
-materials together. To do this effectually, some trivial details in
-wood and iron were made on the spot by the sappers. Private John
-Craig surveyed the island and accomplished his work with quickness
-and credit. The duties of the farm were greatly interrupted by the
-intolerable heat, and numbers seized by the fever were sent away in
-the ‘Wilberforce’ and the ‘Soudan.’ The whole of the model
-arrangements were at length concluded, and on the 21st September the
-‘Albert’ got under weigh again. The sappers were then healthy.
-
-Passing Mugah, the ‘Albert’ anchored off Gori on the 22nd, and
-Captain Trotter paid a visit to the chief. Corporal Edmonds was with
-the party. The chief and his officers were seated on mats in the
-court-yard—a space measuring about twelve feet by eight, formed by
-five ovally-shaped huts. He was an old man, and his counsellor
-answered the questions put to his majesty in a reserved and evasive
-manner. The streets of Gori were very narrow, crooked, and puzzling,
-and in many places not wide enough to allow two persons to pass each
-other. To make way, Captain Trotter would suddenly open his
-umbrella, and the natives, surprised at the novelty, would scamper
-off alarmed.
-
-Continuing the ascent, the ‘Albert’ passed Bezzani, Kinami, and
-Egga, and by the 5th of October, the sick had so greatly increased,
-that the charge of the ship fell on one of the mates. The expedition
-now turned for the sea, and passing the confluence on the 9th,
-steamed down the river in its more navigable channels, and landed at
-Fernando Po on the 18th. There for about six weeks, the expiring
-expedition was stowed away in miserable quarters, and the sad
-remnant re-embarking, put into Ascension, and returned to England in
-the autumn of 1842. All the sappers had been seized with the river
-fever, so called from its peculiarity. Some had severe relapses, but
-only two died—William Rabling at the confluence, on the shores of
-which he was interred, and William Moffatt, somewhere between the
-Niger and Ascension.
-
-The duties performed by the detachment were in all respects the same
-as the marines, until the river Niger was reached, when they acted
-as seamen; but were never required to go aloft. Their chief services
-were rendered at the model farm. Corporal Edmonds was ship’s
-corporal, and had charge of the after hold of the vessel containing
-the provisions of the officers. Whenever Captain Trotter, or any of
-the officers left the vessel for purposes of exploration, he always
-accompanied them as coxswain, armed with a rifle and a full pouch of
-powder. Others of the party were also occasionally employed in this
-particular manner, and all, as their health permitted, assisted by
-Kroomen, performed the last rites of sepulture on those fatal shores
-to the many dead. The special duty they were sent out to perform was
-not required of them, as nautical skill overcame the difficulties of
-the navigation without subaqueous blasting. While serving with the
-expedition, each sapper received double pay according to his rank,
-and free rations. Corporal Edmonds and private John Craig were
-specially noticed by Captain Trotter. “Their steady, zealous
-conduct, even when sickness might have excused them from duty,
-tended much to the good discipline of the ‘Albert,’ and merited,” as
-the captain reported, “his best acknowledgments.” The latter
-assisted with readiness, at all times, in some of the scientific
-observations.
-
-Above the confluence, corporal Edmonds[389] was out in the forest
-with Doctors M‘William and Stanger, when suddenly turning round, he
-saw, approaching from behind a tree, a young elephant, which was
-near to him. In an instant he fired his rifle and the bullet pierced
-the animal in the head. Fearing an attack by other elephants for
-this assault, the gentlemen and the corporal hastened to the boats,
-but as none made their appearance, the party returned into the
-forest, when Edmonds, with a daring that bordered on rashness,
-rushed up to the enraged beast and plunged his sword into its
-throat. The poor animal gave a few hoarse groans and expired. As
-trophies of this sanguinary incident, Edmonds brought away its
-tusks, and Dr. M‘William one of its feet.
-
------
-
-Footnote 389:
-
- An anecdote may be given of this non-commissioned officer. One of
- the princesses of Iddah conceiving a liking for Edmonds, who was a
- handsome, dark-complexioned man, with a brilliant black eye,
- solicited the king, her father, to beg his retention there.
- Captain Trotter consented to let the corporal remain until the
- return of the expedition. Edmonds was not averse to the
- arrangement provided he was permitted to have with him a comrade
- from the ‘Albert.’ This, however, was not conceded, and the
- corporal rejoined his ship; but before doing so, the love-stricken
- princess contrived not to part with her paramour without easing
- him of his silk handkerchief!—to keep, perhaps, in remembrance of
- the interesting feeling he had unwittingly awakened in the royal
- breast. Edmonds served two stations, at Bermuda and Gibraltar,
- became a sergeant, and, on his discharge in 1854, was appointed
- foreman of works under the Inspector-General of Prisons in the
- convict establishment at Portland.
-
------
-
-On the 24th of February, an undress frock coat was established for
-the staff sergeants of the corps. It was plain, without ornament of
-any kind, single-breasted, of dark Oxford mixture, with regimental
-buttons and Prussian collar. The same undress is still worn; but the
-colour has been changed from dark Oxford mixture to dark blue.—See
-Plate XVII., 1854.
-
-By a commission dated 24th May, Captain Henry Sandham was appointed
-brigade-major in the room of Major Edward Matson, promoted to be
-assistant adjutant-general to the royal engineers. The latter
-officer had for many years been attached to the corps, and never did
-its character stand higher than under his command. No means did he
-leave untried to elevate its ranks, and raise it in public
-estimation. He was a disciplinarian in the right sense of the word,
-but in enforcing his orders, he always evinced such a just measure
-of mild consideration, that it was difficult to discover the
-rigidity with which he really acted. So much had he gained the
-gratitude of the corps, that the non-commissioned officers at
-head-quarters respectfully solicited he would sit to an eminent
-artist for his portrait. One hundred pounds was the sum intended to
-be expended, if necessary, in its execution; but as the rules of the
-service seemed to be opposed to such a testimonial, the Major felt
-it to be his duty to decline the honour.
-
-Early in May, sergeant-major Jones and twenty-four rank and file
-proceeded to Spithead to resume the operations against the wreck of
-the ‘Royal George.’ This was the third season of their employment
-under the Admiralty; and Lieut. G. R. Hutchinson, R.E., was placed
-in executive command of the party. The same round of duties and
-toils which marked their previous service at the wreck, were
-repeated with but little variation of detail this season. They were
-constantly on board ship, or employed in boats or lighters attending
-to the general business of the wreck, and often exposed to gales and
-storms, amid difficulty and peril, emulated in their coolness and
-exertions the weather-beaten seamen engaged for the service. All the
-artificers' work of every kind was executed by them. They were also
-entrusted with the entire management of the voltaic battery and
-explosions, and for a portion of the time, the whole of the
-helmet-diving devolved upon them. “Throughout the operations,”
-writes Colonel Pasley, “they were of the greatest service by their
-zeal and exertions.” The season closed on the 29th October, and the
-detachment returned again to Chatham.
-
-Of individuals, Colonel Pasley makes honourable mention of the
-following:
-
-Sergeant-major Jones, for his able and zealous assistance to Lieut.
-Hutchinson in the management of the operations and preserving the
-discipline of the men.
-
-Sergeant Samuel March was very useful in special duties of
-importance; and his drawings and sketches of several hundred
-interesting relics and detached portions of the wreck were well
-executed.[390]
-
------
-
-Footnote 390:
-
- Sergeant March was two seasons at Spitbead. Many of the sketches
- of the wreck were executed by him with the assistance of the
- camera lucida, kindly lent for the purpose by the late Captain
- Basil Hall, R.N., from whom he received much useful instruction.
- Almost the whole of his service has been passed in the
- professional office of the director of the royal engineer
- establishment at Chatham, in which, either as a draughtsman or a
- confidential leading clerk, he has always been found, from his
- attainments and constitutional energy of mind and body, efficient
- and valuable. From time to time he has drawn the plates forming
- the architectural course of the study of the junior officers of
- the corps and the East India Company’s engineers, and also the
- plans and other drawings and projects comprised in the military
- branch of the course. He is an excellent colourist, and has a good
- conception of light and shade. As an artist in water-colours, he
- possesses undoubted talent and merit. Sergeant March is moreover
- an intellectual man and well informed. His controversial letters
- in reply to the calumnious attacks on the royal engineer
- establishment at Chatham have been remarked for their honesty and
- boldness; and his series of communications in the ‘United Service
- Gazette,’ in answer to the forcible animadversions of the
- celebrated ‘Emeritus’ in the ‘Times,’ concerning Ordnance finance,
- were not only well and truthfully written, but deserve for their
- vigour and appositeness as prominent a place in the columns of the
- ‘Times,’ as the communications of the more favoured ‘Emeritus.’
- This non-commissioned officer is now quartermaster-sergeant of the
- corps at Chatham.
-
------
-
-Corporal David Harris, lance-corporals Richard P. Jones and John
-Rae, and privates John Skelton, John Williams, and Roderick Cameron,
-made their services apparent in the duty of diving; and several
-others, particularly privates James Anderson, James Jago, and
-Alexander M‘Alpine, promised well. Of these second-rate divers
-Anderson was so far advanced that besides slinging numerous timbers,
-he probed his way to the dreary bottom of the ship and sent up 18
-feet of the keelson. The successful exertions of the whole party
-attracted admiration, and an immense pile of about 18,600 cubic
-feet, or 372 loads of timber, got up from the wreck in the summer,
-was deposited in Portsmouth dockyard, chiefly through their
-exertions. The divers were six or seven hours a day, and sometimes
-more, under water, at a depth of sixty or seventy feet; and so
-skilfully had they learned to economize time and save labour, that
-all sent up their bundles of staves, casks, or timber, as closely
-packed together, as a woodman would make up his fagots in the open
-air. In one haul, corporal Jones sent up fifty-eight such pieces
-lashed together, and corporal Harris ninety-one! Only one
-professional civil diver was employed in concert with them for about
-half the season; and of the five guns recovered, two brass
-24-pounders, the most valuable of the whole, and an iron 32-pounder,
-were got up by corporal Harris. This non-commissioned officer was a
-most confident and resolute diver, and in Siebe’s dress, repeatedly
-plunged into the sea, head foremost, for experiment. However safe
-might have been the apparatus, it required a bold spirit to make the
-first essay. Lance-corporal Jones, from his superior intelligence,
-rendered himself eminently useful. He was the first to get to the
-bottom of the wreck; and to prove his title to the honour, sent up
-13 feet of the keel.[391] The larboard side, which leaned over when
-the vessel sunk, had fallen to pieces and was buried in the mud.
-This was the most troublesome part of the work; and corporal Jones,
-by tact and perseverance, after removing the timbers on that side,
-got up 300 superficial feet of outside planking covered with copper,
-under which he found the original ground on which the larboard bilge
-rested. His exertions were immense, and the huge pile he recovered,
-was increased by several tons of iron ballast slung by him. Corporal
-Harris was no less successful in reaching places hitherto untouched,
-for he wormed his way down to the floor timbers, found the lee side
-of the wreck, and came in contact with another foundered ship of
-some magnitude, from which he tore a couple of timbers and sent them
-aloft. This discovery was due to an unusual mode of descent in which
-Harris engaged. He went down from the yawl by the sweeps and was
-stopped in his course by the unknown wreck. On re-ascending he
-became entangled in the sweeps and the buoy-line, without, however,
-experiencing any inconvenience beyond the extra exertion of
-disengaging himself from their meshes.
-
------
-
-Footnote 391:
-
- Three feet of the heel of it, with clamps attached, had been
- recovered in the previous year by George Hall the civil diver.
-
------
-
-The curiosities obtained this season were in chief part sent up by
-Corporal Harris, and though intrinsically trifling, were regarded
-with infinitely more relish than the huge masses which made the
-wharf groan with their weight. Nearly the first article recovered
-was a human skull—sad relic of that catastrophe which engulfed in a
-moment so many souls: then came a cumbersome musket with some
-fragments of arms that might have done honourable service against
-the foe. Not the least interesting was a stick of sealing-wax with
-its Dutch advertisement, which translated announced its qualities in
-these recommendatory terms—“Fine, well burning, fast holding
-sealing-wax.” Skelton found a dog-collar inscribed with the name of
-“Thomas Little. Victory. 1781.” The little favourite, no doubt, went
-down with its young master, who was a midshipman on board the
-ill-fated ‘Royal George.’ Singular that sixty years after, this
-simple collar should be dug from the depths, to become a mournful
-_souvenir_ of its perished owner.
-
-Professional divers during the season could not be obtained, unless
-at a cost each, sufficient to pay four or five military divers. The
-latter, paid by the tide, usually earned three or four times as much
-as the regular working pay of the corps, and their successful
-exertions supplied work for about 100 men, who were daily employed
-in removing the timbers, guns, ballast, &c. slung by them. To aid
-the divers in their labours, large rakes and half-anchor creepers
-were drawn over the shoal in which the remains of the wreck were
-lying, by which means much of the mud was harrowed up and cleared
-away. The timbers of the wreck were thus somewhat exposed, and five,
-and sometimes six sapper-divers were down at a tide, forcing their
-way through its dangerous tracks, and sending above its ponderous
-fragments.
-
-In the course of the season, corporal Jones and private Skelton
-ascertained a curious fact before unknown in the annals of diving.
-They met at the bottom, and to their surprise discovered, when
-standing close together, they could hear each other speak; but the
-knowledge thus obtained could not be turned to advantage, as the
-continued effort to speak loudly, exhausted their powers and
-rendered them unable to hold a connected conversation.[392] Skelton
-also met George Hall in the wreck, to whom he introduced himself in
-a way sufficiently courteous for divers, by tapping the _chêf_ on
-the helmet with his iron pricker.
-
-Footnote 392:
-
- When corporal Jones first heard the voice, Skelton was singing,—
-
- “Bright, bright are the beams of the morning sky,
- And sweet are the dews the red blossoms sip.”
-
- This simple incident sufficiently shows the confidence and
- coolness of the diver in so novel and hazardous a duty.
-
-Private Skelton, as on former occasions, made himself conspicuous by
-his skill and diligence as an artificer and his tact as a diver; and
-in addition, this season, his gallantry led him to plunge into the
-sea to save a boy who had fallen overboard, and his father who
-jumped after him, neither of whom could swim. As the tide was
-running very strong, Skelton, with great judgment, tied a line round
-his body, which he made fast to the stern of the ‘Success’ frigate,
-and then jumped into the sea; but before he reached the drowning boy
-and his parent, a boat quickly came to hand and saved them.
-
-Alarming accidents, none of which fortunately proved fatal, occurred
-to lance-corporal Jones, and privates Skelton and Cameron. Corporal
-Jones had his mouth crushed and some of his front teeth broken by an
-iron dog, which he had attached to a bull rope bearing a heavy
-strain, slipping from its hold and striking him violently under the
-helmet. He was at the time endeavouring to move a piece of timber
-from the load, when a pig of iron ballast, weighing about three
-hundred weight, got dislodged and fell upon his helmet. Had not his
-head been thus protected, he would have been killed on the spot, for
-it made an indentation in the metal as large as the palm of one’s
-hand, and nearly an inch deep. At another time, a large floor
-timber, which resisted many efforts to sling it, was at last in a
-fair way of reaching the deck, but on heaving on the bull rope, the
-chain flew off with violence, and struck Jones a blow on the hand,
-laying bare one of his fingers to the bone. Such was his spirit,
-however, he remained at the work, though the mutilated limb might
-readily have excused him from further duty. Anderson, busy at work
-over the wreck, lost all idea of time, and remained below
-imprudently long. Meanwhile the tide began to run swiftly, and,
-losing his ladder which was fixed on the larboard side of the lump,
-he was carried under it, and came up at the starboard side. The man
-attending the life-line found, on hauling it, that it pulled against
-the keel of the lump, and the diver, thus precariously situated,
-could not be drawn up. At first this had a very alarming appearance,
-but the evolution which brought him to the surface, took away the
-danger of the accident, and he alighted on deck without injury.
-Skelton was coming up from the bottom to permit the firing of a
-charge, but by some mismanagement in the signals, the explosion took
-place when he was a few feet from the surface of the water, and the
-shock injured his chest and rendered him insensible for a short
-time. Four days afterwards he resumed his place as a diver with his
-usual zeal and activity. Cameron received an injury by the bursting
-of the air-pipe connected with his helmet, and when hauled on deck,
-he was almost dead from suffocation. He recovered, however, after a
-month’s treatment in Haslar Hospital, and in some respect to
-compensate him for his suffering, the Admiralty ordered him to
-receive his subsistence free of expense.
-
-These accidents never for a moment damped the courage of the other
-men of the detachment, for they were always ready to take the places
-of the injured divers the instant they were warned for the duty. Not
-every man, however, who offered, was found capable of diving under
-such a pressure of water as existed at Spithead. The effect of the
-weight may be conceived from the fact, that the strongest cask sent
-down empty cracked like an egg-shell. Twelve sappers, in addition to
-those named above, essayed to be of service in the art, but several
-among the most resolute and promising divers after two or three
-days' trial, were compelled to desist from the duty. Headaches,
-giddiness, and spitting of blood, were the effects of their
-exertions. Even of the seasoned divers, not a man escaped repeated
-attacks of acute rheumatism and cold; and it was not a little
-surprising to find them returning to the work even before they had
-ceased to complain of their ailments. Harris, Rae and Williams were
-really martyrs in suffering; but, nevertheless, they continued to
-labour at the bottom, even when the sea was high, the weather
-bitterly cold, and their hands so benumbed, that they could scarcely
-feel anything that they slung.[393]
-
------
-
-Footnote 393:
-
- Much of the information about the labours of this summer has been
- collected from the ‘Hampshire Telegraph,’ ‘Army and Navy Register
- ‘Manuscript Journal of the Operations.’
-
------
-
-Second-corporal McQueen returned to the woods in May to resume the
-reconnaissance and survey of the disputed territory in North America
-under Captain Broughton, R.E., and Mr. J. D. Featherstonhaugh, Her
-Majesty’s commissioners. On the 3rd May the Metis lake was gained,
-where corporal McQueen was stationed in charge of the observatory
-until the middle of July. Every day for that period he registered,
-hourly, the barometrical observations of nine instruments with
-thermometers both attached and detached. On the 18th July he entered
-the bush again with thirteen Indians and Canadians, and penetrated
-the forest for forty miles, which brought him to the Metjarmette
-mountain. Throughout this journey he recorded with great care, at
-the appointed hours, the indications of the different instruments in
-his charge, and assisted in the various duties of the survey. The
-mission returned to Lake Metis by a different route, ascertaining,
-as it travelled, the sources of the streams in its track, and
-recording such topographical minutiæ of a particular character as
-were desirable to elucidate the duties and objects of the
-enterprise. On the 24th October, corporal McQueen sailed from Quebec
-_viâ_ Halifax, Nova Scotia, to England, and arrived at Woolwich on
-the 20th November, 1841. For three seasons he had served with the
-Commissioners; twice he was the only British soldier with the
-expedition, and in appreciation of his diligence and conduct, was
-awarded by Lord Palmerston, in addition to his working pay, a
-gratuity of 10_l._[394]
-
------
-
-Footnote 394:
-
- Afterwards became a sergeant, and served at Gibraltar. In October,
- 1852, he was pensioned at 1_s._ 9_d._ a-day. Being a skilful
- mechanic, he obtained on the day of his discharge, employment as a
- blacksmith in the royal carriage department in the arsenal.
-
------
-
-By warrant dated 21st June, 1841, a company of eighty-nine strong,
-numbered the 11th, and one quartermaster-sergeant, were added to the
-corps, which increased its establishment from 1,208 to 1,298 of all
-ranks. The company was raised for Bermuda at the suggestion of the
-Governor of the colony, in consequence of the impracticability of
-obtaining artificers among the civil population of the required
-competency to carry on the works. It did not, however, reach the
-station—where one company was already employed—until the 2nd April,
-1842. The quartermaster-sergeant was appointed for duty at Chatham,
-and sergeant Thomas Fraser was promoted to the rank.[395]
-
------
-
-Footnote 395:
-
- Fraser was a successful modeller, and although a carpenter by
- trade, made himself useful as a wood engraver. Many of the
- wood-cuts in Colonel Pasley’s ‘Practical Operations of a Siege,’
- were executed by him, and although they exhibit but little
- artistic merit, they yet afford scope to show how he adapted
- himself to circumstances. He also assisted in the task of
- engraving the most difficult of the plates to the ‘Architectural
- Course.’ None of his works in this line betray any ambition, but
- his models were put out of hand in a skilful and workmanlike
- manner. As a whole, he was a man of singular simplicity. In July,
- 1849, he was pensioned at 2_s._ 3_d._ a-day, and retiring to
- Kilochunagan, settled down as a farmer.
-
------
-
-Private Henry Entwistle distinguished himself on the 30th August,
-1841, at pontoon practice, by plunging into the rapid stream of the
-Medway near Rochester Bridge, and at imminent personal risk,
-rescuing from drowning private Samuel Turner of the corps, who had
-fallen overboard and was unable to swim. His courage on this
-occasion gained the admiration of the Royal Humane Society, which
-awarded him a silver medallion accompanied by a vellum certificate,
-recording the particulars of his intrepidity, signed by the Duke of
-Northumberland.[396]
-
------
-
-Footnote 396:
-
- Became a sergeant, and after serving at Corfu and China, was
- employed in the expedition under Lord Raglan to Turkey, Bulgaria,
- and the Crimea, where, from disease contracted in the trenches in
- front of Sebastopol, he died in camp before the conclusion of the
- siege.
-
------
-
-The detachments at Sandhurst during the year greatly exerted
-themselves in the field-work instruction, and returned to the corps
-receiving much praise for their zeal and good conduct. Corporal John
-Carlin was in charge of both parties, and was extremely useful. In
-the spring term he skilfully prepared the apparatus for a series of
-subaqueous explosions by the voltaic battery;[397] and, at the
-autumn examination, the rafts and bridges exhibited on the lakes and
-canals were constructed by him and his party. These consisted of
-rafts of rough timber and bridges upon various principles, such as
-floating, suspension, and trestle; also spars heavily loaded at one
-end to act as levers, and others interlaced upon a system of mutual
-pressure. In carrying out these services corporal Carlin was
-honourably noticed, “as a non-commissioned officer of much merit and
-ingenuity.”[398] Corporal John Cameron was also mentioned in the
-Governor’s reports for his activity and ability, and for having
-executed with great neatness a quantity of sod revetments for the
-scarps of the field-works.
-
------
-
-Footnote 397:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ ii., 1841, p. 267.
-
-Footnote 398:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1841, p. 563. Carlin became a
- colour-sergeant, and prior to his discharge had served at
- Gibraltar and Malta, Turkey and the Crimea. When at Portsmouth, he
- received from Lord Frederick Fitzclarence a gold pen and
- engineering pencil-case, in return “for his most useful services
- in carrying out instruction in musketry, in which he proved
- himself to be exceedingly clever in calculations of a rather
- puzzling nature, and to be a most zealous, active, and painstaking
- non-commissioned officer.”
-
------
-
-Colonel Pasley was removed from the appointment of director of the
-royal engineer establishment at Chatham in November, 1841, on
-promotion to the rank of Major-General.[399] Nearly thirty years he
-had held the office, and fulfilled its various functions with a
-genius, composure, and success, that no successor can ever hope to
-surpass. To him the corps is largely indebted for that military
-efficiency which has characterized its progress since 1812.
-Diligently superintending its practical exercise in all the
-operations of a siege, as well as in mining, pontooning, and
-bridge-making, and in the numerous other essential details of the
-field establishment, he made the corps fully equal to the
-prosecution of any service in which its assistance might be
-required. Some well-meaning officers of high rank did not see the
-necessity of training the corps in the principles of elementary
-fortification,[400] but Colonel Pasley finally overcame their honest
-scruples by earnest argument. He not only gained this concession,
-but was permitted to teach the corps the elementary principles of
-geometry and plan-drawing; and ultimately, so extensive and complete
-had his system become, that some hundreds of non-commissioned
-officers and men passed from his schools, as surveyors and
-draughtsmen, to the survey of Ireland. As a disciplinarian he was
-rigid; and in exacting from all under his command that obedience,
-attention, and punctuality which were the characteristics of his own
-laborious career, he was blind to that partiality or favouritism
-which could cover the indiscretion of one offender and punish that
-of another.
-
------
-
-Footnote 399:
-
- The names of the succeeding directors of the royal engineer
- establishment are given in the Appendix III.
-
-Footnote 400:
-
- ‘Military Policy.’
-
------
-
-Here it may be right to show what was the public opinion of the
-corps at this period, as contrasted with its state at the
-commencement of the Peninsular war, and to whom its improved
-organization and perfect efficiency were chiefly attributed. “With
-respect to our engineer establishment, it would perhaps be difficult
-to name any occasion on which a modern European army took the field
-so utterly destitute of efficient means for conducting siege
-operations as were the British troops at the opening of the last
-war. At this moment, on the contrary, no army in the world possesses
-engineer officers and soldiers better instructed in all that relates
-to the science and practice of this branch of the service. We have
-heard one of the most able and most experienced of those officers
-declare, that when he was first called upon to take part in some
-siege operations at the very outset of the war, he had never seen a
-gabion, nor was there a soldier in the force who knew how to make
-one. To carry on a sap, or drive the gallery of a mine, was alike an
-impossible attempt. The army had neither a single sapper, miner, or
-pontoneer, and a few drunken and worthless military artificers
-formed the only engineer troops.... The lessons of experience thus
-dearly bought have not been acquired in vain. The practical engineer
-school at Chatham, organised and long directed by Colonel Pasley,
-has produced a corps of sappers and miners equal to any in Europe.
-Their exercises on the Medway have likewise given them the qualities
-of excellent pontoneers.”[401]
-
------
-
-Footnote 401:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1842, pp. 26, 27.
-
------
-
-Another extract from the same journal, relative to the conduct of
-the corps and the impolicy of the reductions which have taken place
-in its numbers since the return of the army of occupation from
-France in 1818, should not be suppressed:—“The reductions in the
-sappers and miners since the war are much to be regretted; and it
-would be more wise to organize them equivalently to two battalions
-of eight companies. They are a description of troops invaluable in
-every respect,—being as soldierlike, and well trained in the duties
-of infantry, as the best regiments of that arm, and therefore
-equally available for all military services in garrisons and
-quarters; while their qualities as artificers are by no means
-confined to admirable proficiency in their proper business as
-engineer-soldiers, in the management of the pontoon-train and the
-conduct of siege operations. Their exemplary conduct offers an
-illustration of a principle too much neglected in the discipline of
-modern armies—that to find constant and wholesome occupation for
-troops, as indeed for mankind in every situation, is the best
-security both for happiness and good order.... But in the case of
-this engineer corps, apart from the important object of keeping up
-an efficient body for those peculiar duties of their arm in the
-field, which require a regular course of practical education, we are
-convinced it would be found true economy to increase its force for
-the repair and maintenance of the numerous fortifications in every
-quarter of our colonial empire.”[402]
-
------
-
-Footnote 402:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1841, p. 443.
-
------
-
-This perhaps is the fittest place to introduce a glowing testimony
-to the corps, penned by one well acquainted with its merits and
-defects, and too impartial to append his name to any but a faithful
-record. “Indeed,” writes Sir John Jones, “justice requires it to be
-said, that these men, whether employed on brilliant martial
-services, or engaged in the more humble duties of their calling,
-either under the vertical sun of the tropics, or in the frozen
-regions of the north, invariably conduct themselves as good
-soldiers; and by their bravery, their industry, or their
-acquirements, amply repay the trouble and expense of their formation
-and instruction.”[403]
-
------
-
-Footnote 403:
-
- Jones’s ‘Sieges,’ ii. p. 391, 2nd edit.
-
------
-
-Nor should the testimony of the chaplain-general, the Rev. G. R.
-Gleig, be omitted. Unconnected as he is with the royal sappers and
-miners, his opinion has been formed without the prejudice of
-interested feelings. In taking a bird’s-eye retrospect of the
-formation and growth of some of our military institutions, he thus
-speaks of the corps: “Besides the infantry, cavalry and artillery,
-of which the regular army was composed, and the corps of engineers,
-coeval with the latter, there sprang up during the war of the French
-Revolution other descriptions of force, which proved eminently
-useful each in its own department, and of the composition of which a
-few words will suffice to give an account. First, the artificers as
-they were called, that is to say, the body of men trained to the
-exercise of mechanical arts, such as carpentry, bricklaying,
-bridgemaking, and so forth, which in all ages seem to have attended
-on a British army in the field, became the royal sappers and miners,
-whose services, on many trying occasions, proved eminently useful,
-and who still do their duty cheerfully and satisfactorily in every
-quarter of the globe. During the late war, they were commanded under
-the officers of engineers, by a body of officers who took no higher
-rank than that of lieutenant, and consisted entirely of good men, to
-whom their merits had earned commissions. Their education, carried
-on at Woolwich and Chatham, trained them to act in the field as
-guides and directors to all working parties, whether the business in
-hand might be the construction of a bridge, the throwing up of field
-works, or the conduct of a siege. Whatever the engineer officers
-required the troops to do was explained to a party of sappers, who,
-taking each his separate charge, showed the soldiers of the line
-both the sort of work that was required of them, and the best and
-readiest method of performing it. The regiment of sappers was the
-growth of the latter years of the contest, after the British army
-had fairly thrown itself into the great arena of continental
-warfare, and proved so useful, that while men wondered how an army
-ever could have been accounted complete without this appendage, the
-idea of dispensing with it in any time to come, seems never to have
-arisen in the minds of the most economical.”[404]
-
------
-
-Footnote 404:
-
- Gleig’s ‘Mil. Hist.,’ ch. xxvii., pp. 286, 287.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1842.
-
-Party to Natal—The march—Action at Congella—Boers attack
- the camp—Then besiege it—Sortie on the Boers'
- trenches—Incidents—Privations—Conduct of the detachment;
- courageous bearing of sergeant Young—Services of the party
- after hostilities had ceased—Detachment to the Falkland
- Islands—Landing—Character of the country—Services of the party—Its
- movements; and amusements—Professor Airy’s opinion of the
- corps—Fire at Woolwich; its consequences—Wreck of the ‘Royal
- George’—Classification of the divers—Corporal Harris’s exertions
- in removing the wreck of the ‘Perdita’ mooring lighter—Assists an
- unsuccessful comrade—Difficulties in recovering the pig-iron
- ballast—Adventure with Mr. Cussell’s lighter—Isolation of Jones at
- the bottom—Annoyed by the presence of a human body; Harris,
- less sensitive, captures it—The keel—Accidents—Conflict
- between two rival divers—Conduct of the sappers employed
- in the operations—Demolition of beacons at Blythe Sand,
- Sheerness—Testimonial to sergeant-major Jones for his services in
- connection with it.
-
-
-In January, 1842, a small force under the command of Captain Smith,
-27th regiment, was sent to the Umgazi, about ten miles south of the
-Umzimvooboo, to watch the movements of the Boers, who had attacked a
-native chief in alliance with the colonial government. With this
-force was detached a party of eight royal sappers and miners under
-Lieutenant C. R. Gibb of the engineers. There the expedition was
-encamped for a season, when a portion of it, on the 31st March,
-quitted the Umgazi for Natal, taking with them seventy wheeled
-carriages and numerous oxen. The sappers took the lead of the column
-to remove obstructions on the route. The force comprised about 250
-men, chiefly of the 27th regiment, and a few artillerymen.
-
-In the journey to Natal, a distance of more than 600 miles, the
-greatest difficulties were encountered. Much of the ground traversed
-was very marshy. Rivulets and larger streams were so much increased
-by the rains that the broken drifts across them had frequently to be
-renewed or repaired after one or two waggons had crossed. Several
-very steep hills had to be surmounted, one of which was the Umterda,
-over which the hunter and trader had never attempted to take his
-waggon without first dismantling it, and then carrying it up or
-down. Up this rugged hill, formed of huge boulders of granite
-imbedded in a swamp, a rough road was constructed; and by putting
-three spans of oxen—thirty-six bullocks—to each waggon, all, after
-three days' heavy labour and fatigue, were got to the summit.
-Constantly in their progress, they had to improve the roads, to cut
-through wood and bush, to toil along the sand on the shore, and
-occasionally, harnessing themselves with ropes, drag the unwieldy
-train along wild passes and almost impenetrable tracts of fastness.
-At length, after a most harassing march of six weeks, of straining
-energy and arduous exertion, having crossed one hundred and
-seventy-two rivers and streams, much of the journey under violent
-rain, and often sleeping at night on the swampy ground, the troops
-reached Natal on the 3rd May, and encamped at the head of the bay;
-from whence they afterwards removed to the Itafa Amalinde, where
-they intrenched themselves, and placed beyond the parapet, for
-additional protection, the waggons which accompanied the force.
-
-The Boers were opposed to the presence of the troops, and desired
-them to quit the country. This was unheeded by the English
-commandant, and hostilities at once commenced. On the night of the
-23rd May, Captain Smith, in command of a portion of his force, left
-the camp and attacked the Boers at Congella, taking with him seven
-sappers and miners, armed and carrying tools. When the enemy opened
-fire, the troops were in file up to their knees in water. Private
-Burridge fired the first shot in the engagement. More than an hour
-the contest continued without any one being able to take a direct
-aim; and, when the troops commenced the retreat, they were up to
-their armpits in water. Here a sergeant of the 27th was shot, who
-would have been carried away in the receding tide, had not sergeant
-Young with two of the sappers, brought him across the bay to the
-camp, where his remains were interred. Private William Burridge was
-wounded in the knee.
-
-On regaining the camp all were served out with fresh ammunition,
-and, when about to lie down, the Boers attacked the position and
-only retired at daylight in the morning. During the action half of
-the pole of the sappers' tent was carried away by a shot, and the
-waggon in their front was pierced by eleven balls. Private Richard
-Tibbs on this occasion received three balls in his clothes and was
-wounded.
-
-Soon afterwards (31st May) the Boers, comprising a force of about
-1200 men and nine guns, commenced to besiege the camp. This they
-continued with vigour till the 26th June, when a reinforcement
-having reached the cantonment from the frontier, hostilities ceased.
-Throughout the operations the eight sappers were employed
-superintending the execution of such works as the circumstances of
-the siege rendered indispensable. These included a redoubt, to
-preserve the communication with the port and village, and a
-magazine. They also assisted in constructing a large kraal of stakes
-and abattis, for the safety of the cattle. The waggons were likewise
-drawn closer in, to make the defence more compact; and from a
-trench, dug on the inside, the earth was thrown under the body of
-the waggons, which were thus imbedded in the parapet. By this means
-the troops were enabled to fire over the parapet and underneath the
-bed of the waggons; and by leaving traverses in the line of trench,
-the camp was protected from enfilade. Daily the sappers were
-occupied in repairing the earth-works, and almost unassisted, built
-a battery for an 18-pounder gun in the south angle of the
-intrenchment. Sergeant Young, under Lieutenant Gibb, was the
-executive non-commissioned officer in conducting the field-works,
-and twice every day he went round the trenches, reported what was
-necessary to strengthen the defences, and carried out the directions
-of his officer.
-
-On the night of the 8th June, sergeant Young and three sappers
-carrying their arms and intrenching tools, accompanied the sortie to
-the Boers' trenches under Lieutenant Irwin, 27th regiment. The enemy
-retreated and the trenches were destroyed. On the 18th following
-three sappers were present in a second sortie under Lieutenant
-Molesworth of the 27th, and led the column to the points of attack.
-The conflict was short but fierce, and the troops returned to the
-camp with the loss of one officer and three men killed, and four
-wounded. Among the latter was private Richard Tibbs of the sappers.
-
-During the siege, private John Howatson had made some wooden cradles
-for surgical purposes, and on finishing one, begged the doctor to
-look at it. Both stooped to do so, when a 6-pound shot passed within
-a few inches of their heads and whizzed by the rest of the party in
-the trench. When Lieutenant Gibb’s servant was killed, corporal
-Deary and private Burridge buried him outside the waggons, and the
-melancholy service was not accomplished without much daring and
-danger.
-
-As the siege progressed provisions became scarce and the troops were
-put on the smallest possible allowance. Horses were killed and their
-flesh made into biltong. This, with a little beef, formed the daily
-repast of the camp; and in lieu of meal and biscuit, ground oats
-were issued. Upon this fare it was impossible to hold out more than
-fourteen days, but a strong reinforcement arrived on the 26th June,
-and effecting a landing, the Boers retreated with loss and haste
-from the beach and the trenches, and the siege terminated. With the
-relief were three men of the sappers, who increased the strength of
-the Natal party to eleven of all ranks.[405]
-
------
-
-Footnote 405:
-
- Much of the above information is taken from Captain Gibb’s
- ‘Memoranda in Corps Papers,’ i., pp. 230-238.
-
------
-
-Lieutenant Gibb in his report to head-quarters praised sergeant
-Young, corporal Deary, and the detachment for their usefulness,
-alacrity, and cheerfulness; and Captain Smith in command, eulogized
-them for their uniform activity and readiness of resource in the
-presence of the enemy. When quitting Natal, the latter officer
-favoured sergeant Young with a testimonial in the following terms:
-“As I am about to relinquish the command, I am desirous to bear
-testimony to the high and irreproachable character of sergeant Young
-of the royal sappers and miners. Having accompanied the expedition
-from the Umgazi to Natal early in 1842, and shared in all its
-subsequent dangers and privations, I cannot speak too highly of his
-courage and self-possession, and his unwearied zeal in the
-performance of his various and arduous duties. He was always at his
-post and never found wanting; and I therefore beg to recommend him
-to notice as one of the best and most trustworthy non-commissioned
-officers I have met with during my long course of service.”
-
-After the siege the detachment built a sod wall round the camp and
-loopholed it, within which they constructed a temporary barracks of
-wood, working from daylight to dark even on Sundays. A wattle
-barracks for 300 men was next erected by them, and afterwards a
-block-house at Port Natal. They also extended their services to the
-requirements of Fort Napier, Van Vooren, Bushman’s River, and the
-neighbouring posts in the district, during which time their
-head-quarters was established at Pietermauritzburg, where a party of
-ten or twelve men have ever since been employed.[406]
-
------
-
-Footnote 406:
-
- Young, as a sergeant, was overseer of the works at Natal, at 2_s._
- 6_d._ a-day, in addition to his regimental allowances; and, for
- his gallant conduct in action and useful services, was awarded a
- silver medal and an annuity of 10_l._ a-year. In July, 1850, he
- retired to Charleston, of Aberlour, in Banffshire, on a pension of
- 2_s._ a-day. He was a stern and an abrupt soldier, but an example
- of faithfulness, accuracy, and exertion.
-
------
-
-Sergeant Robert Hearnden and eleven rank and file, detached in the
-brig ‘Hebe’ in October, 1841, to the Falkland Islands, under
-Lieutenant R. C. Moody, R.E., the Lieutenant-Governor of the colony,
-arrived there on the 15th January, 1842. Three women and seven
-children accompanied the party. The men were volunteers and of
-trades suitable to the experiment of improving an old but neglected
-settlement. They were armed with percussion carbines, carrying a
-sword with a serrated back, which was affixed to the piece when
-necessary as a bayonet.[407]
-
------
-
-Footnote 407:
-
- This weapon was proposed for adoption in the corps both as a sword
- for personal defence and an instrument for removing obstructions
- on active service; but Sir George Murray, then Master-General,
- refused to sanction its introduction, considering it to be an
- improper weapon to be used in civilized warfare.
-
------
-
-After bearing up Berkeley Sound the party landed at Port Louis
-on the 23rd January, and were present as a guard of honour to
-his Excellency on taking over the government of the Falkland
-Islands. The inhabitants were assembled to receive him and the
-Lieutenant-Governor made them a gracious speech.
-
-Soon the men became acquainted with the nature of the country they
-had been sent to improve. Its land was unfruitful and its character
-inhospitable. Vegetation was so scant and the soil so poor, that
-nowhere could a tree be seen. Large barren tracts of country,
-softened into mud by perpetual rains, everywhere met the eye; and
-the luxuries of living embraced but few varieties beyond fish,
-flesh, and fowl. Houses there were none, nor was there any society
-or amusement. What with rain, snow, fogs, gales, and tempests, the
-Falkland Islands have well been called the _region of storms_. The
-population, not more than 200 in all, consisted of a dissipated set
-of ruffians, the depraved renegades of different countries.
-
-After landing the stores and provisions from the ‘Hebe,’ the
-detachment was put to work. Two portable houses were in course of
-time erected; one for his Excellency, and the other for the sappers.
-For durability they were built on stone foundations, and the roofs,
-to keep out the rain, were covered with tarred canvas and thatched
-with tussack. A number of outhouses and sheds to suit every
-convenience and want were rapidly run up, and the old dreary
-settlement gave unmistakable signs of vigorous industry and
-improvement. One of the houses, with six apartments, was erected as
-an addition to the old government-house, which was a long, narrow,
-crazy structure of one story, with thick stone walls, a canvas roof,
-and five ill-contrived rooms. The other for the sappers, was
-constructed a little distance in the rear of the Governor’s
-dwelling. Two ruinous cottages at Pig Brook were also fitted up, and
-two cottages at German’s Point rebuilt. To make the habitations of
-the location more homely and English, enclosures were fenced in for
-gardens and pasturage. A well likewise was built of dry stone with
-an oval dome and approached by stone steps. For purposes of
-correction, an oven built by the French settlers under Bougainville,
-about 1760, the oldest building in the group, was used for the
-confinement of refractory characters. The detachment, in addition to
-its other duties, served as the police of the settlement, and
-sergeant Hearnden was appointed chief constable.
-
-Much of the time of the men was spent in boat service to Long Island
-and other places to get tussack, oxen, horses, peat, &c. The last
-was obtained in large quantities and stacked for winter fuel.
-Occasionally a few were out on reconnoitring excursions examining
-portions of the country, and surveying the islands and patches of
-land of colonial interest. In this service corporal William
-Richardson, who was a surveyor and mathematician, was the most
-conspicuous. When opportunity permitted, some were employed
-quarrying stone, repairing landing-places, making roads, and
-improving the paths and approaches to the settlement. To add to the
-diversity of their duties, a few were sometimes occupied in marking
-out allotments and indicating the passes or routes across bogs and
-lagoons by means of poles. The first pole was placed on the loftiest
-hill between Port Louis and Saint Salvador, which his Excellency, in
-honour of his sergeant, named _Hearnden Hill_. In short the men were
-compelled to turn their hands to anything, for an abandoned and
-desolate settlement rendered numerous services essential for the
-convenience and comfort of the settlers. Sergeant Hearnden was clerk
-of the works, and also filled with energy and ability a number of
-other offices of colonial necessity.[408] Frequently he was detached
-to considerable distances, and his reports upon the aspects and
-capabilities of particular sites and places were invariably received
-with approbation and his suggestions carried out.
-
------
-
-Footnote 408:
-
- Such as auctioneer, excise-officer, &c. In carrying on the former
- duty, among his many sales, he disposed of the ‘Melville’
- schooner, a vessel belonging to four partners, obtaining for it,
- from one of the partners, only 720 dollars! This may be taken as a
- fair specimen of the wealth of the colonists.
-
------
-
-Sections of the detachment were often sent on duty to Long Island,
-Green Island, Salvador Bay, Johnson’s Harbour, Port William, &c. Two
-or three times the men sent to Long Island could not return to the
-location, as the boats on each occasion were, by a driving gale,
-dashed back on the beach, and the men exposed through the weary
-night to the pelting storm. Once under such circumstances the party
-was without food for twenty-three hours. Two men detached to
-Jackson’s Harbour, when returning home, were caught in a snow-storm
-and with great difficulty reached the untenable hut at Fishhouse
-Creek. There, benumbed and fatigued, they sought shelter for the
-night, being unable to proceed further or to assist themselves.
-
-To relieve the monotony of their public duties, the men were
-permitted to follow any sport which their inclination suggested.
-Boating, hunting,[409] shooting, fishing, and angling, were among
-the varieties of their diversions. Game was plentiful, and the men
-usually returned from their excursions laden with rabbits, geese,
-and birds of different form and plumage. In fishing, the party at
-one time in a single haul, caught at Fishhouse Creek thirteen
-hundred weight of mullet. The Governor, too, was ever ready to
-devise means to promote their amusement and comfort, and on one
-occasion so pleased was he with their general good conduct and
-exertions, that he honoured them with an excellent dinner from his
-own purse and shared himself in the festivities.
-
------
-
-Footnote 409:
-
- All had horses, as travelling on horseback was frequently
- necessary. The Governor presented one, with harness complete, to
- sergeant Hearnden. The men made themselves very expert in the
- management of horses, and throwing aside the rude thongs of raw
- hide by which they were controlled, quickly adapted the
- draught-horses to the use of artillery harness and collars.
-
------
-
-With the view of verifying the reported peculiarity of the tides at
-Southampton, Professor Airy, in February, proceeded thither to
-examine the rise and fall of the water. Some non-commissioned
-officers and privates were placed by Colonel Colby at his disposal
-for this purpose, who prepared and fixed the vertical scale of feet
-and inches, and kept a watch upon the general accuracy of the
-observed tides. “I was,” says the Professor, “extremely glad to
-avail myself of this offer, for I believe that a more intelligent
-and faithful body of men does not exist than the sappers employed on
-the trigonometrical survey; and I know well the advantage of
-employing upon a tedious business like this, a set of regular
-service men stationed on the spot.”[410]
-
------
-
-Footnote 410:
-
- ‘Philosophical Transactions,’ i., 1843, p. 45.
-
------
-
-On the 19th March about 150 non-commissioned officers and men of the
-corps at Woolwich under Lieutenant F. A. Yorke, R.E., were present
-in the night at a fire, which burnt the ‘Bull’ tavern to the
-ground.[411] The sappers were the first to render assistance and to
-secure from destruction much of the property.[412] By the falling of
-the principal wall of the building eighteen persons were severely
-crushed and wounded, six of whom were privates of the corps. Private
-Malcolm Campbell, one of the injured, rescued the landlord, Mr.
-Boyd, from being burnt to death. The latter in a state of great
-bewilderment rushed back into the burning tavern, and Campbell
-dashing after him dragged him through the flames and falling
-timbers, from a back room of the building, into the street
-again.[413]
-
------
-
-Footnote 411:
-
- Reference would not have been made to this service only for the
- accident which attended it. Often it is the lot of the corps at
- the various stations to distinguish themselves at fires, and by
- their promptitude and cheerful exertions, to save both lives and
- property.
-
-Footnote 412:
-
- An insurance company, in no respect under obligations to the
- parties who assisted at the fire, felt interested in the exertions
- of the sappers and awarded them 5_l._ As the sum was too small for
- distribution, it was well expended in the purchase of a clock for
- the barracks at Woolwich.
-
-Footnote 413:
-
- After serving a station in China, died at Woolwich, in July, 1847.
-
------
-
-During the summer a corporal and twenty-three rank and file of the
-royal sappers and miners, and nine men of the East India Company’s
-sappers were employed at Spithead under Major-General Pasley, in the
-removal of the wreck of the ‘Royal George.’ The operations were
-carried on from the 7th May to the end of October under the
-executive orders of Lieutenant G. R. Hutchinson, R.E. In all
-respects the duties, labours, and responsibilities of the sappers
-were the same as on previous occasions, except that the diving was
-carried out by the party, and a few of the East India Company’s
-sappers and miners, without in any one instance needing the help of
-professional civil divers. On the 2nd November the detachment
-rejoined the corps at Chatham.
-
-Four divers were at first employed. On the 13th May the number was
-increased to five, and on the 3rd June to six, which force continued
-at the duty throughout the season. Several other men during the
-summer had been so employed when casualty or other cause prevented
-the regular divers descending, and the whole who had distinguished
-themselves in this work by their activity and success, were
-classified as follows:—
-
- _First-class divers_:—corporal David Harris: lance-corporals
- Richard P. Jones, and John Rae: privates Roderick Cameron,
- James Jago, John Williams, and William Crowdy.
-
- _Second-class divers_:—privates Alexander Cleghorn and John
- Girvan.
-
- _Third-class divers_:—lance-corporal W. Thompson: privates
- William Browning, William Penman, and Edward Barnicoat.[414]
-
------
-
-Footnote 414:
-
- The nine men of the East India Company’s sappers, whose names are
- appended, dived more or less as occasion offered. Lance-corporal
- Thomas Sherstone, privates James Hewitt, James Beale, George
- Taylor, William Brabazon, John Hunt, William England, John McIvor,
- and John A. Goodfellow. Hewitt was the best, Sherstone the next,
- and Beale and Taylor were very promising.
-
------
-
-Corporal Harris almost entirely by his own diligence removed, in
-little more than two months, the wreck of the ‘Perdita’ mooring
-lighter, which was sunk in 1783 in the course of Mr. Tracy’s
-unsuccessful efforts to weigh the ‘Royal George.’ It was about sixty
-feet in length, and embedded in mud fifty fathoms south of that
-vessel. The exposed timbers stood only two feet six inches above the
-level of the bottom, so that the exertions of Harris in removing the
-wreck were herculean. Completely overpowered by fatigue, he claimed
-a respite for a day or two to recruit his energies, and then resumed
-work with his accustomed assiduity and cheerfulness.
-
-There was a sort of abnegation—an absence of jealousy—in the
-character of Harris which, as the rivalry among the divers made them
-somewhat selfish, gave prominency to his kindness. He met Cameron at
-the bottom, who led him to the spot where he was working. For a
-considerable time Cameron had fruitlessly laboured in slinging an
-awkward timber of some magnitude, when Harris readily stood in his
-place; and in a few minutes, using Cameron’s breast-line to make the
-necessary signals, sent the mass on deck. It was thus recorded to
-Cameron’s credit, but the circumstance, on becoming known, was
-regarded with so much satisfaction, that honourable mention was made
-of it in the official journal.
-
-Lance-corporal Jones, a sagacious and indefatigable diver, was the
-most conspicuous for his success at the ‘Royal George.’ In one day
-besides slinging innumerable fragments, he sent up nearly three tons
-of pig-iron ballast. The duty of recovering it, which was
-excessively trying, was confined to him. So painful and enlarged had
-his hands become in discharging it, he was at last fairly beaten,
-and for a few days, took an easier area at the bottom. Meanwhile
-private Hewitt of the East India Company’s sappers, one of the most
-spirited divers of his party, succeeded him, and led by mark-lines
-to the spot, commenced his arduous task. Hard indeed did he labour
-to follow his predecessor even at a remote distance; but on coming
-up, he declared it was impossible for any one to work there. It
-appeared for some time, that Jones in his dogged perseverance, had
-run his adventurous chances in gaps and gullies over his head in
-mud, and could only feel the ballast by forcing his hands down among
-the shingle as far as his strength permitted him to reach.
-
-On another day Jones lodged on deck from his slings a crate
-containing eighty 12-pounder shot. With singular success he laid the
-remainder of the kelson open for recovery, and then, sinking deeper,
-drew from the mud in two hauls nearly 35 feet of the keel. He also
-weighed a small vessel of six tons burden belonging to a Mr.
-Cussell, which drove, under a strong current, upon one of the
-lighters. Becoming entangled, the craft soon filled and foundered,
-grappling in her descent with the ladder of one of the divers.
-Grounding at a short distance from the interval between the
-lighters, Jones was selected to try his skill in rescuing her. At
-once descending he fixed the chains under her stern, and while
-attempting to hold them in position by passing them round the mast,
-the tide turned, the vessel swung about, and the mast fell over the
-side, burying Jones under her sails and rigging. Perilous as was his
-situation, his fearlessness and presence of mind never for a moment
-forsook him. Working from under the canvas and carefully extricating
-himself from the crowd of ropes that ensnared him, he at last found
-himself free. A thunderstorm now set in, and obedient to a call from
-above, he repaired to the deck; but as soon as the squall had
-subsided he again disappeared and cleverly jamming the slings, the
-boat was hove up; but she had become a complete wreck and was taken
-on shore.
-
-Nothing was too venturesome for him to undertake, and the trial of
-enterprising expedients only whetted his wish to be the chief in
-their execution. It was desired to ascertain how long a diver could
-exist in his dress without communication with the external air.
-Jones offering himself for the experiment, remained ten minutes on
-the deck of the lighter, cased up as if hermetically sealed, without
-experiencing any inconvenience. A more dangerous trial followed. A
-clever man had expressed his conviction, that if the air-pipe were
-to burst on deck and the diver not instantly drawn up, he would be
-suffocated. Notwithstanding this scientific speculation, Jones
-descended, and the pump, by signal, ceased. Five minutes he
-continued unsupplied from above, but a feeling of pressure having
-then commenced on his chest, he signalled for air. The knowledge
-thus acquired, proved that a diver had ample time to be hauled up
-before the air in his dress should become too vitiated to sustain
-life.
-
-On going down to examine the progress made in the removal of the
-‘Perdita,’ Jones encountered a human body which had been drowned
-about six weeks. It felt round and hard; was nude to the waist but
-clothed in trowsers to the ankles. Jones was a long time before he
-could discover what it was that annoyed him. On tracing with his
-fingers the course of the spinal column, it felt as if the vertebræ
-were as distinct as the bars of an iron grating. The thought
-suddenly possessed him that he was handling the remains of a fellow
-creature. Horror-stricken at the idea, he rushed up the ladder, and
-it was a few hours before he could sufficiently master his feelings
-to redescend. When he did so he went to the spot where the body
-visited him, and removed the timber he had previously secured. He
-was, however, no more troubled with this submarine apparition nor
-with a return of his melancholy emotions. Two days after, Corporal
-Harris had an interview with a strange substance at the foot of his
-ladder; but not over-nice in his sensations, he struck his pricker
-into it. When pulled up to the surface, it turned out to be the
-mutilated remains that molested the sensitive Jones.
-
-These two non-commissioned officers were now equal to the best
-divers in Europe, and their daring exploits at the bottom of the sea
-under a great depth of water, with a strong tide, and traversing a
-space covered with thick mud, embarrassed by iron and shingle
-ballast, huge timbers, guns, and a thousand other obstacles, were
-constantly recorded in the newspapers of the day, and filled the
-public with wonder.
-
-A sort of fixed intention possessed the minds of the divers this
-season to bring up the leviathan keel at all hazards. Several
-therefore shared in the honour of recovering a portion of it.
-Cameron was the first to burrow under it, and he slung a short
-piece, which was scarfed, connected with six pairs of copper bolts,
-measuring one foot six inches long, and also the clamps for securing
-the false keel. Private James Hewitt of the East India Company’s
-sappers also recovered a short length. Jago, more successful, sent
-up six feet; Harris sixteen feet; and Jones came in for the lion’s
-portion, having slung no less than thirty-four feet six inches.
-Crowdy also added to the registry of his achievements, the recovery
-of a guinea; and Cleghorn had the good fortune to send up an
-18-pounder iron gun, the only one disembowelled from the deep this
-summer.
-
-A few accidents occurred during the season, only one of which was
-serious. Corporal Jones, as usual, fell in for his share of them.
-Slinging, on one occasion, five pigs of ballast, he jumped upon the
-chains to tighten the load and secure it from slipping. In so doing
-the weight whirled round and imparted a rotating motion to the bull
-rope to which the chains were attached. The rope coming in contact
-with his air-pipe and life-line twined several times round them, and
-interrupted, in a measure, the channels of communication. To avert
-the danger which threatened, Jones threw himself on his back,
-declining the slow process of climbing his ladder; and permitting
-the air in proper quantity to take vent through the escape valve,
-passed motionless through the water, except the simple action of his
-hand occasionally to rectify his balance. His upward flight was
-something like the downward pitch of a bird, which, laying its wings
-on the air, descends with scarcely a flutter to the ground. Quickly
-hauled on board, it was not without much difficulty he was
-extricated from the entanglement in which his zeal had unwittingly
-involved him. At another time, being very wet, he was compelled to
-re-ascend to ascertain the cause of the inconvenience. On examining
-his helmet, the escape valve was found to be open owing to the
-presence of a small stone in the aperture, which opposed the true
-action of the valve and admitted water into his dress in a small but
-unchecked stream.
-
-Private John Williams early in the season tore his hands very
-severely in attempting to sling a mass of the wreck with jagged
-surfaces and broken bolts. After a few days' rest, he re-appeared in
-his submarine habit and dived as before; but, from excessive pain in
-the ears, was again _hors-de-combat_ until the 11th July; when, on
-re-descending, he was grievously injured by the bursting of his
-air-pipe a few inches above the water. This casualty was indicated
-by a loud hissing noise on deck. A few seconds elapsed before the
-rupture could be traced and the opening temporarily stopped. With
-great alertness he was drawn up; and on being relieved of his helmet
-presented a frightful appearance. His face and neck were much
-swollen and very livid, blood was flowing profusely from his mouth
-and ears, his eyes were closed and protruding, and on being laid on
-deck, he retched a quantity of clotted gore. Though partially
-suffocated he possessed sufficient sensibility to speak of the
-mishap. A sudden shock, it seems, struck him motionless, and then
-followed a tremendous pressure as if he were being crushed to death.
-A month in Haslar hospital restored him to health, and on returning
-to the wreck, he at once re-commenced the laborious occupation of
-diving. He was quite as venturesome and zealous as before, but was
-again soon obliged to leave off, having resumed the duty at too
-early a period of his convalescence.
-
-A dangerous but curious incident occurred this summer between
-corporal Jones and private Girvan—two rival divers, who in a moment
-of irritation engaged in a conflict at the bottom of the sea, having
-both got hold of the same floor timber of the wreck which neither
-would yield to the other.[415] Jones at length fearful of a
-collision with Girvan, he being a powerful man, made his bull-rope
-fast and attempted to escape by it; but before he could do so,
-Girvan seized him by the legs and tried to draw him down. A scuffle
-ensued, and Jones succeeding in extricating his legs from the grasp
-of his antagonist, took a firmer hold of the bull-rope and kicked at
-Girvan several times with all the strength his suspended position
-permitted. One of the kicks broke an eye or lens of Girvan’s helmet,
-and as water instantly rushed into his dress, he was likely to have
-been drowned, had he not at once been hauled on board. Two or three
-days in Haslar hospital, however, completely cured him of the
-injuries he thus sustained, and these two submarine combatants ever
-afterwards carried on their duties with the greatest cordiality.
-
------
-
-Footnote 415:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii. 1843, p. 139.
-
------
-
-As artificers, lance-corporal Thompson and private Penman were
-skilful and diligent. Lance-corporal Rae and private Thomas Smith
-were in charge of the gunpowder and voltaic battery, and made all
-the mining preparations for explosion. Nearly four tons and a
-quarter of powder were fired in numerous small charges from 18 to
-170 lbs., which will afford some idea of the importance of the
-duty.[416]
-
------
-
-Footnote 416:
-
- Much of the information given about the wreck of the ‘Royal
- George,’ has been gleaned from the ‘Hampshire Telegraph,’ ‘Army
- and Navy Register,’ and the ‘Manuscript Journal of the
- Operations.’
-
------
-
-General Pasley in his official report, besides highly commending the
-men above named, wrote in praise of the general good conduct of the
-entire detachment and of its useful and active services. Corporal
-Blaik, who assisted in the superintendence of the whole of the
-workmen in one of the two mooring lighters, the General alluded to
-as a non-commissioned officer of much merit and strict integrity.
-His courteous behaviour, too, elicited the respect of every man
-employed, and attracted the favourable notice of many officers and
-gentlemen who visited the operations.[417]
-
------
-
-Footnote 417:
-
- Afterwards a sergeant. Was generally employed in duties of
- importance far exceeding his rank, at the Cape of Good Hope, Isle
- of France, and Hong-Kong. In 1847 he was present in the expedition
- to Canton, blew up the Zigzag Fort, and otherwise conspicuously
- distinguished himself. He died at Hong-Kong, after five years'
- service there, in 1848. Blaik had been brought up at the royal
- military asylum, Chelsea.
-
------
-
-Early in September, at the request of the Trinity corporation,
-Colonel Sir Frederick Smith, director of the royal engineer
-establishment, undertook to demolish two barges formerly used as the
-foundations of beacons at Blyth Sand, Sheerness. For this purpose he
-sent Lieutenant Bourchier, R.E., sergeant-major Jenkin Jones and
-seven men of the corps to the spot in the ‘Beaconry,’ one of the
-Trinity steamers. A number of small charges deposited in tin cases
-were fixed at low water, and fired to shake the wrecks. By the
-explosion of a large charge on the 3rd September, one barge was
-completely destroyed and dispersed; and on the 5th, by the firing of
-a still greater charge, the other barge shared the fate of its
-consort. Masses of the wreck on the first explosion were projected
-to a height of about 200 feet, and about 400 feet from the scene of
-operations, while at the same time a column of water, eighty feet
-high, was forced into the air. On the second occasion, Sir Thomas
-Willshire, the commandant of Chatham garrison, and Captain Welbank,
-chairman of the Trinity corporation, were present, but the effect
-was less striking, although a much greater quantity of powder was
-used, in consequence of there being at the moment twenty feet of
-superincumbent water pressing on the barge. Captain Welbank
-personally complimented the “indefatigable” sergeant-major for his
-success, and the corporation of Trinity House afterwards, with the
-permission of the Master-General, presented him with a silver-gilt
-snuff-box to commemorate the assistance he rendered in the
-dispersion of the wrecks.[418]
-
------
-
-Footnote 418:
-
- Four years previously, August, 1838, sergeant-major Jones was
- presented with a silver tankard, “by the sergeants of Chatham
- garrison, in testimony of their gratitude for the undeviating
- attention he evinced in superintending the formation of a military
- swimming-bath at that station.”
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1842.
-
-Draft to Canada—Company recalled from thence—Its services and
- movements—Its character—Labours of colour-sergeant Lanyon—Increase
- to Gibraltar—Reduction in the corps—Irish survey completed; force
- employed in its prosecution—Reasons for conducting it under
- military rule—Economy of superintendence by sappers—Their
- employments—Sergeants West, Doull, Spalding, Keville—Corporals
- George Newman, Andrew Duncan—Staff appointments to the survey
- companies—Dangers—Hardships—Average strength of sapper force
- employed—Casualties—Kindness of the Irish—Gradual transfer of
- sappers for the English survey—Distribution; Southampton.
-
-
-The company in Canada which accompanied the troops to that province
-on the occasion of the unsettled state of affairs on the American
-frontier, was increased to a full company by the arrival of thirteen
-men on the 8th July, 1842.
-
-Scarcely had the party landed before the company itself was
-recalled, and rejoined the corps at Woolwich on the 31st October,
-1842. During its four years' service on the frontier, the total of
-the company, with its reinforcement, counted ninety-nine of all
-ranks, and its casualties only amounted to eight men invalided,
-three discharged, and five deserted. Not a death was reported. From
-time to time it was stationed at Quebec, Fort Mississaqua near the
-Falls of Niagara, St. Helen’s Island, St. John’s, and Fort Lennox,
-Isle aux Noix. These were its several head-quarters, and as the
-company was removed from one to the other, parties were detached for
-service to each of the other stations, and also to Amherstburgh. In
-repairing and improving the defences at Mississaqua and Isle aux
-Noix they were found of great advantage. At the other stations they
-were no less usefully occupied in barrack repairs and other
-contingent services.
-
-From Amherstburgh the detachment rejoined the company in 1840.
-Whilst the latter was at St. Helen’s and afterwards at St. John’s,
-the men were exercised during the summer months in pontooning with
-bridges of Colonel Blanshard’s construction, which had been stored
-at Chambly until 1840. The pontoons were found to travel well on bad
-roads, but the breadth of the rivers in Canada did not permit of
-their being often used as bridges.
-
-After the removal of the company, Colonel Oldfield, the commanding
-royal engineer, thus wrote of it: “The discipline of the company was
-not relaxed by its four summers in Canada. It had suffered the
-inconvenience of several times changing its captain, but it was
-nevertheless maintained in good order and regular conduct.
-Lieutenant W. C. Roberts, R.E., however, was constantly with it, to
-whom and colour-sergeant Lanyon[419] and the non-commissioned
-officers, much credit is due. The desertions only amounted to six,
-although the company was on the frontier in daily communication with
-the United States. Of these six, one returned the following morning;
-a second would have done so but he feared the jeers of his comrades;
-and the other four found when too late the falsity of the
-inducements which had attracted them to the States, and would gladly
-have come back could they have done so.” And the Colonel then
-concludes, “The advantages enjoyed by well-behaved men, and the
-_esprit de corps_ which has always existed in the sappers have been
-found to render desertion rare, even when exposed to greater
-temptation than usually falls to the lot of other soldiers.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 419:
-
- Ante, pp. 307-310. At the new barracks built for the dragoons at
- Niagara, sergeant Lanyon successfully constructed a circular well,
- about thirty feet deep, after two or three contractors had
- attempted it and failed. He laboured himself in laying the stones
- up to his hips in water, and afforded ample work for a strong
- party above in preparing the stones for placement, and pumping up
- the water. The service was effected under many difficulties and
- hazards, and while the weather was intensely cold. As an instance
- of his great strength it may be remarked, that six men complained
- to him of the heavy task they were subjected to in removing
- timbers about 15 feet long and 12 inches square for constructing a
- stockade at Fort Mississaqua. Lanyon made no observation, but
- shouldered one of the unwieldy logs, and, to the amazement of the
- grumblers, carried it to the spot unassisted.
-
------
-
-In the meantime a second company had been removed to Gibraltar in
-the ‘Alban’ steamer under Lieutenant Theodosius Webb, R.E., and
-landed on the 6th July, 1842. This augmentation to the corps at that
-fortress was occasioned by the difficulty felt in procuring a
-sufficient number of mechanics for the works; and to meet the
-emergency, the company in Canada was recalled, as in both provinces
-works of considerable magnitude had been carried on by civil
-workmen, who could at all times be more easily engaged in a country
-receiving continual influxes by immigration, than in a confined
-fortress like Gibraltar with a limited population.
-
-On the return of the Niger expedition in November, to which eight
-rank and file had been attached, the establishment of the corps was
-reduced from 1,298 to 1,290 of all ranks.
-
-The survey of Ireland upon the 6-inch scale was virtually completed
-in December of this year, terminating with Bantry and the
-neighbourhood of Skibbereen. The directing force in that great
-national work was divided into three districts in charge of three
-captains of royal engineers in the country; and there was also a
-head-quarter office for the combination and examination of the work,
-correspondence, engraving, printing, &c., in charge of a fourth
-captain. To each of these districts the survey companies were
-attached in relative proportion to the varied requirements and
-contingencies of the service, and adapted to the many modifications
-which particular local circumstances frequently rendered imperative.
-A staff of non-commissioned officers and men was also stationed at
-the head-quarter office, and discharged duties of trust and
-importance.
-
-In framing his instructions for the execution of the Irish survey,
-Colonel Colby had to reject his old opinions formed from
-circumscribed examples of small surveys, and to encounter all the
-prejudices which had been fixed in the minds of practical men. The
-experience of these parties did not extend beyond the surveys of
-estates of limited space, performed without hurry and with few
-assistants. Colonel Colby, on the other hand, was to survey rapidly
-a large country, with much more accuracy. The two modes were
-therefore so entirely different, that it took less time to train for
-its performance those who had no prejudice, and who had been brought
-up by military discipline to obey, than to endeavour to combine a
-heterogeneous mass of local surveyors fettered by preconceived
-notions and conceits, deficient in habits of accuracy and
-subordination, and who could not be obtained in sufficient numbers
-to form any material proportion of the force. Hence the survey of
-Ireland became essentially military in its organization and control,
-the officers of engineers being the directors of large parties, and
-the non-commissioned officers the subordinate directors of small
-parties.
-
-In the later years of the Irish survey, however, the superintendence
-by the sappers became of much consequence and its advantages very
-appreciable in the reduction of expense. For the year 1827, the
-outlay for the survey was above 37,000_l._, at which period the sum
-paid to the officers was more than one-third of the whole amount;
-but in 1841, when the expenditure was more than doubled, the amount
-for superintendence had been reduced to a twelfth part of the total
-expenditure.[420]
-
------
-
-Footnote 420:
-
- ‘Second Report Army and Ordnance Expenditure,’ 1849, p. 500. To
- such an extent was the diminution in the number of the officers
- subsequently carried, that in 1849 the amount of expense incurred
- by the superintendence of officers was reduced to one
- twenty-second part of the total expenditure; therefore by the more
- general employment of sappers in the direction of the work, the
- amount of superintendence was reduced from one-third and
- one-fourth, to one twenty-second part.
-
------
-
-The general employment of the sappers and miners in this great
-national work embraced the whole range of the scheme for its
-accomplishment, and many non-commissioned officers and men trained
-in this school became superior observers, surveyors, draughtsmen,
-levellers, contourers, and examiners. Among so many who
-distinguished themselves it would be almost invidious to name any;
-but there were a few so conspicuous for energy of character,
-efficiency of service, and attainments, that to omit them would be a
-dereliction no scruples could justify. Their names are subjoined:—
-
-Colour-sergeant John West celebrated as an engraver. In 1833, the
-Master-General, Sir James Kempt, pointed out his name on the
-engraving of the index map of Londonderry to His Majesty William IV.
-in terms of commendation; and the Master-General, while West was yet
-a second-corporal, promoted him to be supernumerary-sergeant, with
-the pay of the rank. Most of the index maps of the counties of
-Ireland were executed by him, and a writer in the United Service
-Journal[421] complimented him by saying that the maps already
-completed by him were as superior to the famous _Carte des Chasses_
-as the latter was to the recondite productions of Kitchen, the
-geographer. His also was the master hand that executed the city
-sheet of Dublin, and his name is associated with many other maps of
-great national importance. The geological map of Ireland, 1839,
-engraved for the Railway Commissioners, was executed by him; and in
-all his works, which are many, he has displayed consummate skill,
-neatness, rigid accuracy, and beauty both of outline and topography.
-In October, 1846, he was pensioned at 1_s._ 10_d._ a-day, and
-received the gratuity and medal for his meritorious services. He is
-now employed at the ordnance survey office, Dublin, and continues to
-gain admiration for the excellency of his maps.
-
------
-
-Footnote 421:
-
- ii., 1835, p. 154.
-
------
-
-Sergeant Alexander Doull was enlisted in 1813. After serving a
-station in the West Indies, he was removed to Chatham. There on the
-plan of ‘Cobbett’s Grammar,’ he commenced publishing letters to his
-son on “Geometry,” but after the second number appeared, he
-relinquished the undertaking. In 1825 he joined the survey
-companies, and was the chief non-commissioned officer at the base of
-Magilligan. He was a superior mathematical surveyor and draughtsman,
-and his advice in difficult survey questions was frequently followed
-and never without success. Between 1828 and 1833 he had charge of a
-12-inch theodolite, observing for the secondary and minor
-triangulation of one of the districts, and was the first
-non-commissioned officer of sappers, it is believed, who used the
-instrument bearing that designation. In July, 1834, while employed
-in the revision of the work in the neighbourhood of Rathmelton, he
-introduced a system of surveying similar to traverse-sailing in
-navigation, which effected a considerable saving of time in the
-progress of the work, and elicited the approbation of Colonel Colby.
-While on the duty he invented a plotting-scale,[422] and
-subsequently a reflecting instrument,[423] both simple and ingenious
-in construction. After a service of twenty-three years, he was
-discharged in January, 1838. When the tithe commutation survey was
-thrown into the hands of contractors, Doull got portions of the work
-to perform, and his maps were referred to in terms of high
-commendation by Edwin Chadwick, Esq.[424] Among several towns that
-he surveyed, one was Woolwich, the map of which, dedicated to Lord
-Bloomfield, was published by him in 1843. In the proposed North Kent
-Railway, Mr. Doull was assistant-engineer to Mr. Vignoles, and he
-planned a bridge of three arches, having a roadway at one side and a
-double line of rails at the other, with an ornamental screened
-passage between, to span the Medway where the new bridge recently
-constructed, connects Strood and Rochester; which plan, had the
-proposed railway not been superseded by a rival line, would have
-secured an enduring fame for the designer. This was the opinion of
-Mr. Vignoles and Sir Charles Pasley. Afterwards when the competing
-companies were preparing their respective projects, Mr. Doull
-represented the engineering difficulties of the opposing scheme in a
-pamphlet under the signature of “Calculus.” In this his military
-knowledge and experience were well exhibited, inasmuch as he showed
-how the fortifications at Chatham would be injured by the adoption
-of that line; and the railway consequently, on account of this and
-other influences, has never been prolonged so as to interfere with
-the defences. A few years afterwards he published a small work
-entitled, “Railway Hints and Railway Legislation,” which obtained
-for him, from the South-Eastern Railway Company—the one he so
-perseveringly opposed—the situation of assistant-engineer to the
-line. More recently he issued a pamphlet on the subject of a railway
-in America,[425] which for its boldness and lucidity gained for him
-the praise of a rising literary genius in the royal engineers.[426]
-His last pamphlet on the subject of opening a north-west passage
-between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, a distance of 2,500 miles,
-is more daring, and evinces more pretension and merit than any of
-his previous literary efforts. Mr. Doull is also known as the
-inventor of several improvements of the permanent way of
-railways,[427] and is a member both of the Society of Civil
-Engineers and the Society of Arts.
-
------
-
-Footnote 422:
-
- Frome’s ‘Surveying,’ 1840, p. 40. Simms' ‘Math. Inst.,’ 1st edit.
-
-Footnote 423:
-
- Frome’s ‘Surveying,’ 1840, p. 44.
-
-Footnote 424:
-
- ‘British Companion and Almanack,’ 1843, p. 38.
-
-Footnote 425:
-
- First published in a series of letters to the ‘Morning Chronicle,’
- and then collected, with additional matter, in a pamphlet.
-
-Footnote 426:
-
- Synges’s ‘Great Britain—one Empire.’
-
-Footnote 427:
-
- These he patented in November, 1851. A description of the
- improvements, with sixteen illustrations, is given in the ‘Civil
- Engineer and Architects’ Journal,' xv., pp. 164, 165.
-
------
-
-Serjeant Robert Spalding was for many years employed on the survey
-of Ireland, from which, on account of his acquirements, he was
-removed to Chatham to be instructor of surveying to the young
-sappers. To assist him in the duty he published a small manual for
-the use of the students. It was not an elaborate effort, but one
-which detailed with freedom and simplicity the principles of the
-science. In 1834 he was appointed clerk of works at the Gambia,
-where his vigorous intellect and robust health singled him out for
-varied colonial employment, and his merits and exertions frequently
-made him the subject of official encomium. Five years he spent in
-that baneful and exhausting climate, and in 1840, just as he was
-about to sail for England, the fever seized him, and in a few days
-he died. In his early career as a bugler he was present in much
-active service, and was engaged at Vittoria, San Sebastian,
-Bidassoa, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse.
-
-Sergeant Edward Keville was a very fair and diligent artist. He
-engraved the index map of the county of Louth, and assisted in the
-general engraving work at the ordnance survey office in Dublin. In
-January, 1846, he was pensioned at 1_s._ 10½_d._ a day, and obtained
-re-employment in the same office in which he had spent the greatest
-part of his military career.
-
-Second-corporal George Newman was eminent as a draughtsman, and the
-unerring fineness and truthfulness of his lines and points were the
-more remarkable, as he was an unusually large man of great bodily
-weight. He died at Killarney in 1841.
-
-Lance-corporal Andrew Duncan was a skilful and ingenious artificer.
-His simple contrivance for making the chains, known by the name of
-“Gunter’s chains,” is one proof of his success as an inventor. Those
-delicate measures, in which the greatest accuracy is required, have
-by Duncan’s process been made for the last twelve years by a
-labourer unused to any mechanical occupation, with an exactitude
-that admits of no question. The apparatus is in daily use in the
-survey department at Southampton, and the chains required for the
-service can be made by its application with great facility and
-rapidity. He was discharged at Dublin in September, 1843, and is now
-working as a superior artizan in the proof department of the royal
-arsenal.
-
-Equally distinguished were sergeants William Young, William
-Campbell, and Andrew Bay, and privates Charles Holland and Patrick
-Hogan, but as their names and qualifications will be found connected
-with particular duties in the following pages, further allusion to
-them in this place is unnecessary.
-
-Colonel Colby in his closing official report, spoke of the valuable
-aid which he had received from the royal sappers and miners in
-carrying on the survey, and as a mark of consideration for their
-merits, and with the view of retaining in confidential situations
-the non-commissioned officers who by their integrity and talents had
-rendered themselves so useful and essential, he recommended the
-permanent appointment of quartermaster-sergeant to be awarded to the
-survey companies; but this honour so ably urged was, from economical
-reasons, not conceded.
-
-Seventeen years had the sappers and miners been employed on the
-general survey and had travelled all over Ireland. They were alike
-in cities and in wastes, on mountain heights and in wild ravines,
-had traversed arid land and marshy soil, wading through streams and
-tracts of quagmire in the prosecution of their duties. To every
-vicissitude of weather they were exposed, and in storms at high
-altitudes subjected to personal disaster and peril. Frequently they
-were placed in positions of imminent danger in surveying bogs and
-moors, precipitous mountain faces, and craggy rocks and coasts.
-Boating excursions too were not without their difficulties and
-hazards in gaining islands almost unapproachable, and bluff isolated
-rocks and islets, often through quicksand and the low channels of
-broad sandy bays and inlets of the sea, where the tide from its
-strength and rapidity precluded escape unless by the exercise of
-extreme caution and vigilance, or by the aid of boats.
-
-Two melancholy instances of drowning occurred in these services:
-both were privates,—William Bennie and Joseph Maxwell; the former by
-the upsetting of a boat while he was employed in surveying the
-islands of Loch Strangford, and the latter at Valentia Island. This
-island consisted of projecting rocks very difficult of access, and
-when private Maxwell was engaged in the very last act of finishing
-the survey a surf swept him off the rock. A lad named Conway, his
-labourer, was borne away by the same wave. The devoted private had
-been immersed in a previous wave by which his note-book was lost,
-and while stooping with anxiety, to see if he could recover it,
-another furious wave dashed up the point and carried him into the
-sea.[428]
-
------
-
-Footnote 428:
-
- In consideration of this event, the Board of Ordnance granted his
- widow a donation of 20_l._; and she was, moreover, assisted by a
- very handsome subscription from the officers and men of the
- district in which her husband had served.
-
------
-
-Hardship and toil were the common incidents of their everyday
-routine, for on mountain duty theirs was a career of trial and
-vicissitude. Comforts they had none, and what with the want of
-accommodation and amusement in a wild country, on a dizzy height,
-theirs was not an enviable situation. Covered only by a canvas tent
-or marquee they were barely closed in from the biting cold and the
-raging storm; and repeatedly tents, stores, and all, have been swept
-away by the wind or consumed by fire, while the hardy tenants, left
-on the bleak hill top, or the open heath, have remained for days
-together half naked and unsheltered. Such was their discipline and
-such their spirit, they continued to labour protected only by their
-great coats—if haply they escaped destruction—till, renewed with
-tents or huts, they pitched again their solitary dwellings far away
-on the height or the moor.
-
-Even on the less exposed employments of the survey, the men were
-subjected to many discomforts and fatigues. The marching was
-harassing; miles to and from work were daily tramped, frequently in
-a drenching rain; and in this kind of weather soaked to the skin,
-they barely permitted their work to be interrupted. Night after
-night for two or three weeks together, have these men returned to
-their quarters dripping wet; and when, in frosty weather, their
-clothes have frozen on their backs, the removal of boots and
-trousers have only been accomplished by immersing the legs in warm
-water.
-
-The average strength of the three companies set apart for the
-survey, for each year from 1825 to 1842, is subjoined:—
-
- Least Greatest Average for each
- Strength. Strength. 12 Months.
- 1825 61 109 86
- 1826 106 134 115
- 1827 129 220 177
- 1828 232 259 248
- 1829 234 257 242
- 1830 233 258 247
- 1831 248 268 255
- 1832 230 256 242
- 1833 211 231 220
- 1834 204 215 209
- 1835 199 204 201
- 1836 195 198 196
- 1837 191 213 199
- 1838 208 217 213
- 1839 199 220 208
- 1840 183 213 197
- 1841 87 179 142
- 1842 31 74 50
-
-During the above period the casualties by death in Ireland only
-amounted to twenty-nine of all ranks, proving the general
-healthiness of their occupation. Of these, three were untimely:
-two by drowning as shown in a preceding paragraph, and one
-killed—private John Crockett—by falling from a car while
-proceeding on duty from Leixlip to Chapelizod.
-
-Here it should be noted that the sappers, in the prosecution of
-their duty, necessarily mixed with all descriptions of society, and
-were invariably treated with respect, civility, and hospitality. The
-spirit of agrarianism, the bigotry of religion, or the natural
-irritable temperament of the people, were seldom evinced against the
-companies in abuse or conflict.
-
-As the work was drawing to a close the sappers by rapid removals
-augmented the force employed in the survey of Great Britain, so that
-at the termination of 1841 there were no less than 143 men chiefly
-in the northern counties of England, and thirty-four carrying on the
-triangulation of Scotland, leaving for the residual work of the
-Irish survey only eighty-seven men of all ranks.
-
-In June, 1842, the payment of the companies in England commenced on
-a system of consolidating the detachments into a series of vouchers
-prepared for their respective companies. At that time the force in
-Ireland, left for the revisionary survey of Dublin and the northern
-counties and for the engraving office at Mountjoy, reached a total
-of six sergeants and forty-one rank and file; while the absorbing
-work of the survey of Great Britain had on its rolls a strength of
-217 of all ranks. Southampton, in consequence of the destruction of
-the map office at the Tower of London by fire, was established as
-the head-quarters of the survey companies; and in the institution
-formerly known as the royal military asylum for the orphan daughters
-of soldiers, are now carried on those scientific and extensive
-duties which regulate with such beautiful accuracy and order, the
-whole system of the national survey.
-
-
-
-
- 1843.
-
-Falkland Islands; services of the detachment there—Exploration
- trips—Seat of government changed—Turner’s stream—Bull
- fight—Round Down Cliff, near Dover—Boundary line in North
- America—Sergeant-major Forbes—Operations for removing the wreck of
- the ‘Royal George’—Exertions of the party—Private Girvan—Sagacity
- of corporal Jones—Success of the divers—Exertions to recover the
- missing guns—Harris’s nest—His district pardonably invaded—Wreck
- of the ‘Edgar,’ and corporal Jones—Power of water to convey
- sound—Girvan at the ‘Edgar’—An accident—Cessation of the
- work—Conduct of the detachment employed in it—Sir George
- Murray’s commendation—Longitude of Valentia—Rebellion in
- Ireland—Colour-sergeant Lanyon explores the passages under Dublin
- Castle—Fever at Bermuda—Burning of the ‘Missouri’ steamer at
- Gibraltar—Hong-Kong—Inspection at Woolwich by the Grand Duke
- Michael of Russia—Percussion carbine and accoutrements.
-
-
-The settlement at Port Louis, in the Falkland Islands, was daily
-growing into importance, and works applicable to every conceivable
-emergency were executed. This year the old government-house was
-thoroughly repaired, and a new substantial barrack for the
-detachment erected. Unlike the other buildings of the colony, the
-foundation-stone was laid by the Governor with the usual ceremony,
-and in a chamber was placed a bottle of English coins of the reign
-of Queen Victoria. There were also built houses for baking, cooking,
-and to hold boats. A butcher’s shop was likewise run up, and
-cottages erected for the guachos and their major-domo, as well as a
-small calf house on Long Island and a large wooden peat-house at
-Town Moss. To add to the variety of their employment the sappers
-repaired the pass-house, put the pinnace in fine sailing condition,
-and constructed a jetty of rough stones for boats. Other services of
-less note but equally necessary were performed, such as quarrying
-stone, building a sod-wall to enclose a space for garden purposes,
-stacking peat for the winter, and removing stores and provisions
-from the newly-arrived ships, &c.
-
-Parties were detached on exploring services to North Camp and Mare
-Harbour. In both places wild cattle abounded and troops of horses
-made no attempt to scamper away. On one excursion sergeant Hearnden
-and corporal Watts accompanied Mr. Robinson to Port St. Salvador in
-the face of a snow-storm, opposed by a cutting wind. Several wild
-horses and a herd of savage bulls were met in the trip; and geese,
-too, crossed their track in vast numbers, merely waddling out of the
-way to prevent the horsemen crushing them. Night at length spread
-over them. To return in such weather was impossible; and looking
-about they discovered a heap of stones, which turned out to be a
-sealer’s hut. The ribs of a whale were its rafters and turf and
-stones served the purpose of tiles. Leashing their horses and
-fastening them in a grassy district some four miles from the hut,
-Hearnden at once repaired the roof of the desolate hermitage, and
-Mr. Robinson with his companions crept into it through a small
-aperture on their hands and knees. Here they passed a bitter night;
-and so intense was the cold that four of the five dogs taken with
-them perished. Next day they returned to the settlement with less
-appearance of suffering than cheerfulness, and with a heavy supply
-of brent and upland geese and some wild rabbits.
-
-Notwithstanding the inclement weather, the health of the detachment
-continued to be robust. Fourteen months they had been at the
-Falkland Islands without a doctor; but in March one was added to the
-settlement from the ‘Philomel.’
-
-After having erected comfortable residences for nearly the whole of
-the official establishment, the seat of government, by orders from
-the Colonial Office, was removed to Port William. The proclamation
-for this purpose was read to the inhabitants of Port Louis by
-sergeant Hearnden on the 18th August, 1843. Jackson’s Harbour was
-selected by the Lieutenant-Governor for the future settlement. Soon
-after, the detachment marched overland to the spot, and continued
-there during the remainder of the year—except when temporary service
-required their presence at Port Louis—preparing the location for the
-Governor and the official officers. A sod-hut was soon run up for
-one of the married families, and the rest were tented on boggy
-ground about twenty yards from the river. In stormy weather the
-ground, as if moving on a quicksand, would heave with the fury of
-the wind; and what with the whistling of the gale through the
-cordage, the flapping of the tents, and the roaring of the waves,
-the men at night were scarcely free from the hallucination of
-fancying themselves at sea.
-
-Their early operations at Jackson’s Harbour were very harassing,
-much of the material required for building having to be brought from
-a distance; but before the close of the year a two-roomed wooden
-cottage was erected with some convenient outhouses for domestic
-purposes. A portable house for the surveyor was also constructed,
-and one built in Mare Harbour. A rough jetty of planks, piles, and
-casks was likewise made, and the high grass for miles about the
-settlement was burnt down. This service was not accomplished without
-difficulty, for the continual rains having saturated both grass and
-ground, prevented the spreading of the flames, and required
-unceasing efforts for more than a month to insure eventual success.
-
-While out on this duty sergeant Hearnden discovered a good ford for
-horses about 150 yards from Turner’s Stream, and marked the spot by
-a pile of stones, the summit of which was on a level with high-water
-mark. Turner’s Stream was named in compliment to a private of that
-name, who carried the Governor in his journeys over the shallow
-waters and lagoons that intersected his track.
-
-Much discomfort and some privation were experienced by the men in
-the first months of their encampment at Jackson’s Harbour. To get
-meat they usually travelled to Port Harriet, or some eight or nine
-miles from the location. The bulls they shot were always cut up on
-the spot and their several parts deposited under stones till
-required for use at the camp. In these expeditions the bulls were
-frequently seen in herds and wild horses in troops, sometimes as
-many as fifteen in a group. Once the camp was attacked by a number
-of wild horses and four savage bulls. The party, about four in
-number, were at breakfast at the time they approached, and, at once
-seizing their loaded rifles, ran out of the tent to meet them. Two
-of the bulls only, stood their ground; and though struck by two
-bullets, rushed on furiously, and forced the party to beat a hasty
-retreat. A position was rapidly taken up among some barrels and
-timber, under cover of which the men were reloading; but the
-onslaught of the bulls was so impetuous that the operation was
-interrupted and the party driven into the tents. One of the animals
-now trotted off; but the other, still pursuing, bolted after the men
-into the marquee. A ball from private Biggs’s rifle fortunately
-stopped his career, and, turning round, the infuriated animal tore
-up the tent, committed great havoc through the camp, and made a
-plunge at private Yates, who dexterously stepped aside, and, firing,
-shot the bull in the head, and the combat ceased.
-
-Lance-corporal John Rae and private Thomas Smith were employed in
-January under Lieutenant G. R. Hutchinson, R.E., in the demolition
-and removal by blasting of a portion of the Round Down Cliff, near
-Dover, for the purpose of continuing the South Eastern Railway in an
-open line, supported by a sea-wall, up to the mouth of Shakspeare
-Tunnel. The summit of the cliff was about 380 feet above high-water
-mark, and 70 feet above that of Shakspeare Cliff. The two sappers
-had the executive superintendence of the mines, the placement of the
-charges, and various duties connected with the management of the
-voltaic apparatus and wires. No less than 180 barrels of gunpowder
-were expended in the operation; and the explosion by electric
-galvanism brought down, in one stupendous fall, a mass of
-chalk—about 400,000 cubic yards—which covered a space of 15½ acres,
-varying in depth from 15 to 25 feet, and saved the South Eastern
-Railway Company the sum of 7,000_l._
-
-Six corporals under Captain Robinson, R.E., with Lieutenant Pipon,
-were attached, under orders from Lord Aberdeen, to the commission of
-which Lieutenant-Colonel Estcourt was the chief, for tracing the
-boundary line between the British dominions in North America and the
-United States, as settled by the Ashburton treaty. Dressed in plain
-clothes, they embarked at Liverpool on the 19th April, and arriving
-at Halifax on the 2nd May, proceeded by Boston and New York to the
-Kennebec road and entered the woods late in the month. In May, 1844,
-the party was increased to twenty men by the arrival of fourteen
-non-commissioned officers and privates from the English survey
-companies. The co-operation of this party was urged as of paramount
-importance. It enabled the work, so says the official communication,
-to be carried on over a large portion of country at once with energy
-and rapidity, and in such a manner as to insure a more vigorous and
-correct execution of it than if the Commissioners were left to
-depend on the assistance to be met with on the spot; and which,
-although greatly inferior in quality, would have entailed more
-expense on the public than the employment of the military surveyors.
-Each sapper was selected as being competent to work by himself, and
-to survey and run lines of levels, besides keeping in constant
-employment a staff of labourers.
-
-Sergeant-major James Forbes retired from the corps on the 11th
-of April on a pension of 2_s._ 2_d._ a-day. He was succeeded
-by colour-sergeant George Allan,[429] an excellent drill
-non-commissioned officer, who was appointed to the staff at
-Chatham, vicê sergeant-major Jenkin Jones, removed to the
-staff at Woolwich.
-
------
-
-Footnote 429:
-
- Became in time the quartermaster of the royal engineer
- establishment at Chatham, and when the siege of Sebastopol was at
- its highest, was removed from the corps by promotion into the
- Turkish contingent engineers with the rank of Captain.
-
------
-
-The merits of sergeant-major Forbes have been frequently alluded to
-in these pages, but there still remain some other points in his
-history to be noticed. To the royal military college at Sandhurst,
-he presented several models made by himself on military subjects.
-About two years before his retirement he invented the equilateral
-pontoon, a vessel of a very ingenious character. Its sides consist
-of “portions of cylinders, supposed to be applied to three sides of
-an equilateral triangular prism, each side of the triangle being two
-feet eight inches long; so that the cylindrical portions meet in
-three edges parallel to the axis of the pontoon. The sagitta, or
-versed sine of the curvature being about one-fifth of the side of
-the triangle, it follows that each side of the pontoon forms, in a
-transverse section, an arc of nearly 90°. Each end of the pontoon
-consists of three curved surfaces, corresponding to the sides of the
-vessel, and meeting in a point, as if formed on the sides of a
-triangular pyramid.”[430] “The form,” says Sir Howard Douglas,
-“appears to be well adapted for the purposes of a good pontoon; as
-whichever side is uppermost it presents a boatlike section to the
-water, and a broad deck for the superstructure. It possesses, also,
-the advantage of a horizontal section gradually enlarging to the
-highest point of displacement, by which means stability and
-steadiness in the water are obtained in a high degree. The area of a
-transverse section of this pontoon is greater than that of the
-present cylindrical pontoon; and the greater capacity produces more
-than a compensation, in buoyancy, to the small excess of weight
-above that of a cylindrical pontoon.”[431] A raft of this form of
-pontoon was prepared under the eye of the sergeant-major and sent to
-Chatham for trial, but although it gained much favour for its
-decided excellences, it was finally set aside on account of “some
-inconvenience in the management causing a preference to be given to
-those of a simple cylindrical form”[432]—the construction, in fact,
-established for the service. He was however awarded by the Board of
-Ordnance, in consideration of his trouble and as a tribute to his
-skill, the sum of one hundred guineas.
-
------
-
-Footnote 430:
-
- Sir Howard Douglas, ‘On Military Bridges,’ 3rd edit., p. 32.
-
-Footnote 431:
-
- Ibid., 33.
-
-Footnote 432:
-
- Ibid., 33.
-
------
-
-On leaving the royal sappers and miners, he was appointed surveyor
-to a district of the Trent and Mersey canal, at a salary of 215_l._
-a year, with a fine residence and five acres of land attached. He
-was also allowed forage for two horses, and all his taxes and
-travelling expenses were paid. Some two years afterwards his salary
-was increased to 280_l._ a year, and in 1846, so highly appreciated
-were his services, that the Directors of the company proposed him to
-fill the office of engineer to the canal. His integrity however was
-such, that he would not be tempted by the great increase of salary
-the promotion promised, and declined it, from a modest feeling that
-he might not be able to do justice to so important and onerous a
-charge. Quickly upon this, he received the thanks of the Directors,
-accompanied by a special donation of 100_l._ Determining upon other
-arrangements for the execution of their works, the company disbanded
-its establishment of workmen and superintendents, retaining only the
-engineer and Mr. Forbes; and such was his character for alacrity,
-resolution, and discrimination, that the Directors appointed him to
-superintend all the works undertaken for the company, both on the
-canal and the North Staffordshire Railway, which was now
-incorporated with the Trent and Mersey Canal proprietary. This
-alteration in the company’s affairs, caused his removal from
-Middlewich to a commodious residence in Etruria, in Staffordshire,
-where his energy and influence in the parish soon gained him the
-post of churchwarden, and the honour of being invited to a public
-breakfast, at which, while the Bishop of Lichfield held the chair,
-he had the distinction of filling the vice-chair. Latterly he has
-appeared before the public as a writer. His pamphlet on the National
-Defences, proposing a locomotive artillery, addressed to Lord John
-Russell, was perused by that nobleman and received the attention of
-Sir John Burgoyne. Frequently he has written in the public journals
-on pontoons. He has also published a pamphlet on the subject, and
-another relative to a pontoon-boat, which he has invented.[433] The
-latter is of great interest and may yet receive the attention its
-ingenious suggestions deserve. On the 6th of May, 1853, he was
-elected an Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers, for
-which honour he was proposed by the great Robert Stephenson and Mr.
-S. P. Bidder, the two leading civil engineers of this country.
-Within the last year, he has been advanced to the post of engineer
-to the company, and he enjoys the perfect satisfaction and
-confidence of his employers. His salary and emoluments exceed
-400_l._ a year.
-
------
-
-Footnote 433:
-
- It is simply a half-cylinder, 20 feet long by 1 foot 9 inches
- wide, and 3 feet deep, strengthened internally by hollow tubes,
- and deriving its buoyancy from an ingenious distribution of
- water-tight compartments, which not only preserve the flotation
- but provide seats for the troops. To render the contrivance more
- efficient for rafts or bridging purposes, a similar half-cylinder
- is attached to its consort by strong hinges and bolts. When shut
- its form is cylindrical; when open, two boats in rigid connection,
- taking the same swing in the water—the same motion on the wave. In
- this Siamese connection it is intended always to be used; and
- fitted as it is with all the necessary details, and the means of
- applying a rudder or an oar for steerage at any end, it appears to
- be adequate for all the uses and contingencies, not only of a
- pontoon, but of an ordinary passage-boat. It moreover aspires to
- the merciful functions of a lifeboat, being capable, without risk
- of capsizing or sinking, of venturing out in heavy seas to save
- human life imperilled by squalls or shipwreck.
-
------
-
-The operations against the wreck of the ‘Royal George’ were resumed,
-for the fifth time, early in May, with a detachment of fifteen royal
-sappers and miners, eight East India Company’s sappers, and about
-eighty seamen, riggers, &c., under the direction of Major-General
-Pasley, with Lieutenant G. R. Hutchinson as the executive officer.
-At the end of 1842, almost all the floor timbers had been got up and
-101 feet of the keel, leaving only about 50 feet more at the bottom;
-and out of 126 tons of pig-iron ballast, 103 tons had been safely
-wharfed. There was therefore confident reason to expect the entire
-removal of the wreck before the close of the season; and such indeed
-was the success of the enterprise, that Major-General Pasley, on
-quitting the work in November, declared that the anchorage ground,
-where the wreck had lain, was as safe and fit for the use of ships
-as any other part of Spithead. At first four divers went down
-regularly, and afterwards five or six were at work at every slack
-tide, generally three times a day.
-
-After a few weeks of unsuccessful effort, the firing of three
-charges each of 675 lbs. of powder in puncheons, removed a bank of
-shingle which chiefly interfered with the divers' success. These
-charges were fixed by corporals Harris and Jones, and private
-Girvan. In one week afterwards, the divers effected as much as in
-the five weeks previously, for not only were the keel and bottom
-planking somewhat bared, but a great deal of the remaining iron
-ballast was rendered accessible. Six other charges, of 720 lbs. of
-powder each, and numerous smaller charges, were subsequently fired,
-with results that gave ample employment for all the divers and the
-detachment on board.
-
-One or two failures occurred which arose from want of experience in
-firing conjunct charges at Spithead; but in other respects, the
-operation, which was exceedingly difficult, was conducted with skill
-and success, owing to the able arrangements of Lieutenant
-Hutchinson, assisted by the leading riggers, and by lance-corporal
-Rae and private Alexander Cleghorn, who had the preparation of the
-charges and the voltaic batteries. The divers, too, did everything
-necessary at the bottom, and were well seconded in every department
-by the sappers and others employed. “In short,” adds the
-narrative,[434] “this operation, including the separation of the two
-mooring lighters before the explosion and bringing them together
-afterwards,” could not, in consequence of the severe weather, have
-possibly succeeded, “if all the men had not, from long experience,
-known their respective duties well and entered into them with
-laudable zeal.”
-
-“On the 9th of July private John Girvan slung the largest and most
-remarkable piece of the wreck that had been met with this season,
-consisting of the fore foot and part of the stem, connected by two
-very large horse-shoe copper clamps bolted together; the boxing by
-which it had been connected with the fore part of the keel was
-perfect, from which joint six feet of the gripe had extended
-horizontally, and terminated in the curve of the stem, which was
-sheathed with lead.—The length of this fragment was sixteen feet,
-measured obliquely, and its extreme width five feet.”[435] At
-another time he recovered an enormous fish-hook, no less than eight
-feet nine inches in length from the eye to the bow!
-
-By corporal Jones, on the 17th following, was slung a large iron
-bolt, ten feet long; which, on being brought on deck, was observed
-by him to exhibit marks of having been in contact with brass. He
-therefore rightly conjectured there must be a brass gun at the spot,
-and descending again recovered a brass 24-pounder, nine and a half
-feet long, of the year 1748.[436]
-
------
-
-Footnote 434:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1843, p. 139.
-
-Footnote 435:
-
- Ibid., p. 139.
-
-Footnote 436:
-
- Ibid., p. 138.
-
------
-
-“On the 31st of July, private Girvan discovered a gun buried under
-the mud, but it was not till the 3rd of August that he succeeded in
-slinging it, assisted by corporal Jones, with whom he generally
-worked in concert this season;”[437] and shortly after, the latter
-diver recovered the last remnant of the keel, measuring nearly
-twenty-two feet in length, corporal Harris having previously sent up
-portions of it in the early part of the summer amounting in length
-to thirty-six feet,[438] and private Girvan, six feet.
-
------
-
-Footnote 437:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1843, p. 139.
-
-Footnote 438:
-
- Ibid., pp. 137, 140.
-
------
-
-The only money got up this season was a guinea of 1775, found on a
-plank sent up by Jones.
-
-Increased exertions were now made to recover the guns, which were
-embedded some depth in the mud, and the divers cleared the way by
-sending up everything they could meet with, until nothing but
-insignificant fragments could be found. To assist them, two frigate
-anchors and the half anchor creepers with some auxiliary
-instruments, drawn backwards and forwards as well as transversely
-over the site of the wreck, were made to do effectual work. The East
-India Company’s sappers had been removed before these labours
-began;[439] the whole of the subsequent diving, therefore, was
-exclusively carried on by the royal sappers and miners,[440] and to
-their vigilance of observation and unceasing zeal, was attributed
-the recovery of thirteen guns late in the season. Of these, corporal
-Harris got up three iron and six brass guns, corporal Jones three
-brass, and private Girvan one iron.
-
------
-
-Footnote 439:
-
- Quitted 28th August, 1843.
-
-Footnote 440:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1844, p. 143.
-
------
-
-Here it should be explained “how much more successful than his
-comrades corporal Harris was towards the close of the season, in
-recovering guns, though the other divers, corporal Jones and
-privates Girvan and Trevail, had been equally successful in all the
-previous operations. Corporal Harris fell in with a nest of guns,
-and it was a rule agreed upon, that each first-class diver should
-have his own district at the bottom, with which the others were not
-to interfere.”[441]
-
------
-
-Footnote 441:
-
- Ibid., p. 146.
-
------
-
-Jones, though satisfied with the arrangement as a general rule, was
-a little disposed to feel aggrieved when, by contrast, the odds were
-against him. He was curious to know by what means Harris turned up
-the guns with such teasing rapidity, and going down with the secret
-intention of making the discovery, tumbled over a gun with its
-muzzle sticking out of the mud. This piece of ordnance legitimately
-belonged to Harris, for it was in his beat; but, as Jones
-enthusiastically expressed it, seeming to invite the favour of
-instant removal, he could not resist the temptation to have its
-recovery registered to his credit. He therefore securely slung it,
-and rubbing his hands with delight at the richness of the trick,
-gave the signal to haul up. Harris, suspecting that his territory
-had been invaded, dashed down the ladder and just reached the spot
-in time to feel the breech of the gun slipping through his fingers.
-Jones, meanwhile, pushed on deck, and was pleased to see that the
-plundered relic was a 12-pounder brass gun of the year 1739. Jones a
-second time applied to the district over which Harris walked with so
-much success, and filched from the nest a brass 12-pounder gun—the
-last one recovered this season.
-
-After the removal of the ‘Royal George’ had been effected, but while
-the search for the guns was going on, Major-General Pasley detached
-to the wreck of the ‘Edgar,’[442] the ‘Drake’ lighter, with thirteen
-petty officers and seamen of Her Majesty’s ship ‘Excellent,’ to
-learn the art of diving. Corporal Jones was attached to the party to
-instruct them. Violent gales prevailed at this period, “which
-repeatedly drove the ‘Drake’ from her moorings, not without damage,
-and at other times caused her to drift in such a manner that guns,
-discovered by a diver late in a slack, could not be found when the
-weather permitted his subsequent descent.” Hence only five iron guns
-of this wreck were got up during the season, with a piece of the
-keel and a floor timber. These were all recovered by corporal Jones,
-who had also been engaged one tide in finding an anchor that had
-been lost.[443] So anxious was he to add to the magnitude of his
-acquisition, that on one occasion he remained below as long as four
-hours, but his exertions were unattended with the hoped-for return.
-
------
-
-Footnote 442:
-
- This ill-fated ship, built by Bailey of Bristol in 1668, was
- wrecked by an explosion in 1711, and every soul on board
- perished.—‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1844, p. 146.
-
-Footnote 443:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ i., 1844, pp. 145, 146.
-
------
-
-An interesting fact with respect to the power of water to convey
-sound was ascertained on the 6th October. A small waterproof
-bursting charge containing 18 lbs. of gunpowder was fired at the
-bottom. Corporal Jones who happened at the time to be working at the
-‘Edgar’—nearly half-a-mile distant—hearing a loud report like the
-explosion of a cannon, imagined that a large charge had been fired
-over the ‘Royal George.’ To those on deck immediately over the
-place, the report was scarcely perceptible.
-
-Private Girvan relieved corporal Jones at the ‘Edgar’ on the 16th
-October, and got up the breech part of an iron 32-pounder, which had
-been cut in two a little in front of the trunnions.[444]
-
------
-
-Footnote 444:
-
- Ibid., p. 146.
-
------
-
-The only mishap this summer occurred to private Girvan. Just as he
-appeared above the water the explosion of a charge took place, from
-which he sustained a slight shock and a wrench in the back producing
-a sensation of pain. Though eager to go down again his wish was
-overruled, and he remained on board for the day. Sergeant Lindsay
-fired the charge, and the accident was attributed to a nervous slip
-of his hand when ready to apply the wires to the battery.
-
-On the 4th November the divers descended for the last time, as the
-water had become so cold that their hands—the only part exposed—were
-completely benumbed, so that they could no longer work to advantage;
-and then, the operations ceasing from necessity, the detachment of
-the corps rejoined their companies at Woolwich.
-
-Major-General Pasley in according his praises to the various
-individuals and parties employed at Spithead, spoke highly of
-sergeant George Lindsay in subordinate charge, and the whole
-detachment; but more particularly of the intelligent and
-enterprising men to whom the important task of preparing all the
-charges fired by the voltaic battery was confided. The charges were
-numerous and of various quantities, amounting in all to 19,193 lbs.
-of powder, or nearly 214 barrels. The soldiers alluded to were
-lance-corporal John Rae and private Alexander Cleghorn who were
-promoted for their services. The still more arduous duty of diving
-gave the General every satisfaction. Frequently the duty was
-embarrassing and dangerous, and carried on under circumstances
-calculated to test most severely their courage and resources; and so
-indefatigable were their exertions, and so successful their
-services, that the military divers gained the character of being
-“second to none in the world.”[445] Most of the party this season
-attempted to dive, but, from the oppression felt under water by
-some, only two or three beyond the regular divers could persevere in
-the duty.
-
------
-
-Footnote 445:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1843, p. 141.
-
------
-
-Upon the report made by Major-General Pasley of the conduct of the
-detachment engaged in the operations, Sir George Murray, the
-Master-General, was pleased thus to remark: “It has given me no less
-pleasure to be made acquainted with the very commendable conduct of
-the non-commissioned officers and privates of the sappers and miners
-who have been employed under Major-General Pasley, and have rendered
-so much useful service in the important undertaking conducted under
-his management.”
-
-From June to September about eight men under Lieutenant Gosset,
-R.E., assisted in the undertaking for determining the longitude of
-Valentia by the transmission of chronometers. Thirty chronometers
-were conveyed in every transmission; and to privates Robert Penton
-and John M‘Fadden was entrusted the service of bearing the
-chronometers, and winding them up at stated times and places. On
-receiving the chronometers from Liverpool the reciprocations took
-place repeatedly between Kingston and Valentia Island; one private
-being responsible for their safe transit a portion of the route, and
-the other for the remaining distance to and from the station at
-Feagh Main. Professor Sheepshanks and Lieutenant Gosset carried out
-the scientific purposes of the service, while the sappers not
-engaged with the chronometers attended to the duties of the camp and
-observatory at Feagh Main, under the subordinate superintendence of
-corporal B. Keen Spencer. The professor instructed this
-non-commissioned officer in the mode of taking observations with the
-transit instrument; and further, in testimony of his satisfaction,
-gave generous gratuities to privates Penton and M‘Fadden. Professor
-Airy, in speaking of the former, alludes to the perfect reliance he
-placed on his care, “and in winding the chronometers,” adds, “he has
-no doubt the service was most correctly performed.”[446] The duty
-was one in which extreme caution and care were required, to prevent
-accident or derangement to the instruments.
-
------
-
-Footnote 446:
-
- Airy’s ‘Longitude of Valentia,’ p. xi.
-
------
-
-Agitation for a repeal of the union, headed by O’Connell, was now
-the great excitement of Ireland, and a rising of the masses to
-enforce it was daily expected. With the reinforcement of troops sent
-there to preserve order was the first company of sappers, which was
-despatched by rapid conveyances, _viâ_ Liverpool to Dublin, where it
-arrived on the 26th July. The company consisted of ninety men of all
-ranks, and their duties embraced repairs to the barracks and the
-planting of stockades in the rear of the castle, to prevent the
-ingress, in case of revolt, of the rebels.[447] They also prepared
-several thousands of sand-bags for breastworks. Detachments of one
-sergeant and twenty rank and file were sent to Limerick and Athlone
-in November, where they strengthened the barracks and loopholed the
-outside walls for musketry. The store-rooms of the artillery
-barracks were also loopholed. Effectually, however, was the
-anticipated outbreak suppressed, and, under the authority of Sir
-James Graham, the Home Secretary, the company was recalled to
-England and arrived at Woolwich on the 22nd August, 1844.
-
------
-
-Footnote 447:
-
- Owing to a rumour that the castle at Dublin could be entered by a
- subterranean passage or sewer from the Liffey, colour-sergeant
- Lanyon was directed to explore it. He did so, and found that a
- strong iron grating existed in the passage, which would
- effectually prevent the supposed entrance. In this duty, being
- much exposed to the influence of noxious vapours, he soon
- afterwards was seized with fever and jaundice, which shortened his
- days.
-
------
-
-The yellow fever broke out at Bermuda in August, and continued with
-unabated virulence and fatality until the middle of September. In
-that brief period, out of a strength of 165 men, it carried off no
-less than thirty-three men of the eighth company and four men of the
-fourth, besides Captain Robert Fenwick, R.E., in command of the
-latter, and Lieutenant James Jenkin, the Adjutant.[448] The two
-companies were distributed to St. George’s and Ireland Island; at
-the former, where the fever chiefly raged, was the eighth company,
-about ninety strong, and at the latter the fourth. Eighty-eight men
-had been seized with the malady, of whom twenty-four were admitted
-with relapses, and four had suffered three seizures, none of whom
-died. Dr. Hunter, a civil physician, attended the cases in the
-absence of a military medical officer. With the civil population his
-practice was remarkably successful; for out of 101 natives who took
-the fever only one died. He therefore concluded that the artillery,
-who lost nine men, and the sappers thirty-seven, fell easy victims
-to the epidemic from their intemperate habits. No comparison,
-however, was justifiable between coloured people, upon whom the
-fever had but little effect, and Europeans; but an analysis of the
-cases, as far as the sappers were concerned, confirmed the doctor’s
-views to the extent of sixteen men. The remainder, twenty-one, were
-men of sobriety and general good conduct.
-
------
-
-Footnote 448:
-
- Mr. James Dawson, foreman of masons, formerly colour-sergeant in
- the corps, also died during the fever. He was a clever tradesman
- and overseer, and while in the sappers did good service at St.
- Helena, Corfu, and Bermuda. He was succeeded as foreman by
- sergeant John McKean, who was discharged in November, 1843, and
- still fills the appointment with ability and faithfulness.
-
------
-
-Lance-corporal Frederick Hibling being the only non-commissioned
-officer _not_ attacked, performed the whole duties of the eighth
-company, and for his exertions and exemplary conduct was promoted to
-the rank of second-corporal. Seven widows and twenty-two orphans
-were left destitute by this calamity, among whom a subscription
-(quickly made through the corps, assisted by many officers of royal
-engineers, nearly amounting to 200_l._) was distributed, in
-proportion to their necessities—one woman with six children
-receiving as much as 33_l._ The lowest gift was 14_l._ to a widow
-without children. A monument of chaste and beautiful design,
-consisting of a fluted column surmounted by an exploded bomb,
-resting on a neat and finely proportioned pedestal, was erected in
-the military burial-ground at St. George’s, in mournful
-commemoration of the victims. On three panels of the pedestal were
-inscribed their names, and on the fourth was sculptured the royal
-arms and supporters. The work was executed by the surviving
-stonemasons of the company, and the royal arms were cut by private
-Walter Aitchison.
-
-On the 26th August, in the evening, the ‘Missouri,’ United States'
-steamer, Captain Newton, took fire in the bay of Gibraltar, and a
-detachment of the corps at the Rock was sent out by Sir Robert
-Wilson, the Governor, in charge of two engines under Captain A.
-Gordon, R.E., to assist in extinguishing the flames; but all their
-diligence and intrepidity were unavailing, for the vessel was soon
-afterwards burnt to the water’s edge. During the service the men
-were in much danger from falling masts and spars, and from the
-explosion of a powder-magazine on board. The Governor, in orders,
-thanked Captain Gordon and other officers of royal engineers, and
-the non-commissioned officers and privates of royal sappers and
-miners, for the creditable and useful zeal displayed by them on the
-occasion; and added, “that the marines, military, and boatmen of
-Gibraltar have the consoling reflection that nothing was left undone
-to save the vessel, and that the gallant crew was preserved by their
-united labour and devotedness.” To each sapper employed at the fire
-was issued a pint of wine by his Excellency’s order.
-
-One sergeant and thirty-three rank and file under Lieutenant T. B.
-Collinson, R.E., sailed for China in the ‘Mount Stuart Elphinstone,’
-and landed at Hong Kong the 7th October. A party of variable
-strength had been stationed there, employed superintending the
-Chinese artificers in carrying on the public works until July, 1854,
-when the sappers were recalled to England. Some of their first
-services embraced the construction of roads and sewers, the erection
-of barracks for the troops and quarters for the officers, with
-various military conveniences, such as stores, guard-houses, &c. A
-residence was also built for the General in command, and a sea-wall
-of granite to the cantonment on the north shore of the island. They
-also directed the Chinese in cutting away a mountain to a plateau,
-of about eight acres, for a parade-ground, much of which was
-granite; and the several explosions rendered necessary to dislodge
-the mass were fired solely by sergeant Joseph Blaik. A company of
-Madras sappers also assisted in the superintendence of the coolies,
-who sometimes exceeded a thousand in number. The working pay of the
-royal sappers and miners was 1_s._ 6_d._ a-day each until the
-removal of the East India Company’s establishment, when the
-allowance was reduced to the ordinary payment of 1_s._ each. Before
-the party was quartered in barracks it was housed for a time in a
-bamboo hut and afterwards in a bungalow. The smiths and plumbers
-were invariably employed at their trades, as the Chinese were very
-incompetent in these branches of handicraft.[449]
-
------
-
-Footnote 449:
-
- In May, 1851, when the tour of service of the detachment had
- expired, only six men were at the station to be relieved. The
- remainder comprised one discharged in China, who soon afterwards
- died, twelve invalided to England, and fifteen deaths.
-
------
-
-On the 9th October his Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Michael of
-Russia inspected the troops at Woolwich, on the common. The royal
-sappers and miners at the station were also drawn up with them, and
-marched past. Next day the Grand Duke, accompanied by Lord
-Bloomfield, visited the sappers' barracks, walked through the rooms,
-examined the carbine of the corps, and then looked over, with every
-mark of attention, the small museum of the non-commissioned officers
-attached to the library. On leaving, he expressed his gratification
-at what he saw, and of the efforts made by the soldiers to improve
-themselves.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Royal Sappers & Miners. Plate XV.
- UNIFORM 1843. Printed by M & N Hanhart.
-
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The percussion carbine and sword-bayonet, were generally adopted in
-the corps this year, superseding the flint-lock musket and
-bayonet.[450] The length of the musket with bayonet fixed was six
-feet two inches, but the carbine with sword was constructed an inch
-shorter. The carbine itself was nine inches and a-half shorter than
-the musket, but to make up for this reduction, and to enable a
-soldier to take his place in a charge, the sword-bayonet measured
-ten inches longer than the rapier-bayonet.[451]
-
------
-
-Footnote 450:
-
- Arms of the percussion principle had been on trial in the corps
- since July, 1840.
-
-Footnote 451:
-
- These figures would seem to make the carbine and sword 1½ inches
- longer than the old musket, but the loss of the supposed
- additional length was occasioned by the greater depth of the
- socket required to give strength and stability to the weapon. The
- comparative weight of the two arms gave a reduction in favour of
- the carbine of 2 lbs. 3½ ozs.
-
------
-
-The shoulder-belt for the bayonet for all ranks was at this time
-abolished, and a waist-belt two inches broad, with cap-bag and
-sliding frog, substituted. This new accoutrement is the same as the
-present one; and the breast-plate then, as now, bore the royal arms
-without supporters, within a union wreath, based by the word
-“_Ubique_,” and surmounted by a crown. The sword-bayonet was this
-year worn vertically for the first time, instead of obliquely as
-formerly.
-
-The pouch-belt was not altered, but the pouch, the same as at
-present worn, reduced in dimensions, was made to contain thirty
-instead of sixty rounds of ball ammunition. The brush and pricker
-were now abolished.
-
-The sergeants' swords were also withdrawn, and their arms and
-appointments made to correspond with the rank and file, the only
-difference being the addition of ornaments on the pouch-belt, which,
-with the waist-plate, were washed with gilt. The ornaments comprised
-a grenade bearing on the swell of the bomb the royal arms and
-supporters; detached from this, underneath, was a scroll inscribed
-“_Royal Sappers and Miners_,” to which a ring was affixed sustaining
-a chain united to a whistle, resembling an old round watch tower;
-the whistle itself forming the battlemented crown, inscribed with
-the motto “_Ubique_.”[452] These ornaments, the suggestion of
-Major—now Colonel—Sandham, are still worn by the sergeants.
-
------
-
-Footnote 452:
-
- The idea for this ornament was taken from the martial custom among
- the Romans of presenting a mural coronet of gold or silver to the
- undaunted soldier who should first scale the walls of a city and
- enter the place. Bailey in his Dictionary of 1727 says, “It was
- given to the meanest soldier as well as the greatest commander.”
- As the assault of fortresses in sieges is the chief business of
- the sappers, the round tower with its mural crown on the
- sergeant’s appointments, is an appropriate symbol for the corps.
-
------
-
-The buglers' short sword with three guards was replaced this year by
-one after the pattern of the Ceylon rifles' band. The hilt formed an
-ornamental Maltese cross with fleury terminations, and on the flat
-between the horizontal limbs, above the blade, was an exploded
-grenade. The blade was straight, two feet ten inches long, and the
-mounting on the scabbard was chased and embellished. The weapon is
-still worn by the buglers, and is altogether neat, pretty, and
-convenient.—See Plate XVII., 1854.
-
-
-
-
- 1844.
-
-Remeasurement of La Caille’s arc at the Cape—Reconnoitring
- excursion of sergeant Hemming—Falkland Islands—Draft to
- Bermuda—Inspection at Gibraltar by General Sir Robert
- Wilson—Final operations against the ‘Royal George’—and the
- ‘Edgar’—Discovery of the amidships—incident connected with
- it—Combats with crustacea—Success of corporal Jones—Injury to a
- diver—Private Skelton drowned—Conduct of the detachment employed
- in the work—Submarine repairs to the ‘Tay’ steamer at Bermuda by
- corporal Harris—Widening and deepening the ship channel at St.
- George’s—Intrepidity of corporal Harris—Accidents from mining
- experiments at Chatham—Notice of corporal John Wood—Inspection
- at Hong-Kong by Major-General D’Aguilar.
-
-
-The detachment set apart to measure the base line on Zwartland Plain
-at the Cape commenced the second season in September, 1841. It
-opened under a somewhat different arrangement with respect to the
-issue of provisions. Captain Henderson managed it in 1840, Mr.
-Maclear in 1841, and sergeant Hemming was appointed to act as his
-quartermaster-sergeant. Captain Henderson left the work in December
-and returned to England.
-
-As soon as the base was measured, the triangulation began, and was
-carried on, with the exception of the winter interval, until
-January, 1842. Then the work was completed to the north extremity of
-La Caille’s arc in the vicinity of St. Helena Bay. A few months were
-now spent in effecting the triangulation to the south as far as Cape
-Point, and in December, 1842, the work was resumed to the
-northward.[453]
-
------
-
-Footnote 453:
-
- ‘Professional Papers,’ N. S., i., p. 32.
-
------
-
-In January, 1843, the triangulation commenced at a headland north of
-St. Helena Bay, latitude about 32° S., and continued nearly parallel
-to the coast line, and about thirty miles from it until it reached
-Kamiesberg a little south of Lat. 30°. Here the arc was expected to
-terminate. The difficulties encountered this season were of a
-formidable kind, and the care required in the transport of Bradley’s
-zenith sector and a large theodolite, occasioned much tedious
-anxiety for their preservation. The party, too, was formed of
-different materials; the infantry soldiers had quitted, and the
-shipwrecked crew of the ‘Abercrombie Robinson’ had been engaged in
-their stead. Most of these sailors were rough, ill-behaved fellows,
-and, therefore, the chief responsibility of the preparations and the
-conveyances devolved upon the sappers. In addition to this, the
-country passed over north of the Oliphant river was a straggling
-desert, and the points used were at high altitudes—one of which
-exceeded 7,000 feet.[454]
-
------
-
-Footnote 454:
-
- ‘Professional Papers,’ N. S., i., p. 32.
-
------
-
-In its progress northward, the party crossed the Oliphant or
-Elephant river on the 15th June, 1843, and the day being Sunday,
-encamped on its north bank to spend the sabbath. Six days after the
-expedition arrived at the foot of the Kamiesberg, where fell heavy
-rain for three days and two nights; and when the march was
-recommenced, the ground was so saturated, that the whole train had
-to be dug out of the mud repeatedly every day. In three days only
-eighteen miles were accomplished and that with great exertion. The
-oxen were now so knocked up that the farmers refused to go any
-further, and a fresh supply was procured at a missionary
-establishment twelve miles distant. When nearing that institution,
-the provisions were very low, and the difficulties of the expedition
-in this respect were greatly augmented by a heavy fall of snow. For
-the whole day the party were without food, nor could they make a
-fire to warm themselves.[455] They laboured, however, with excellent
-spirit, and succeeded that night in bringing three of the waggons to
-the missionary station; but the other two, sticking fast in the deep
-ruts, were not brought up till the next day. The men were badly
-shod, and suffered greatly. About a week after, the instruments were
-fixed and the observations commenced, which continued until October
-1843, when the party returned to Cape Town,[456] and afterwards
-marched up the country to join their company.
-
------
-
-Footnote 455:
-
- About twelve miles from the sea ice was found three-eighths of an
- inch thick.
-
-Footnote 456:
-
- ‘Professional Papers,’ i., N. S., p. 32.
-
------
-
-The objects used for reflecting or observing were heliostats about 7
-inches in diameter, and were chiefly attended to by the sappers, who
-were sometimes detached on this duty for several months at a time
-with a couple of natives under them to assist. On account of the
-heat, the observations were discontinued at 11 A.M., and not renewed
-until 3 P.M. Notwithstanding this intermission, the signal duties
-were oppressive. All supplies were got from a distance, which fully
-occupied the two natives in procuring them. The sappers were also
-intrusted with large sums of public money to pay all demands as the
-work progressed. On the Kamiesberg mountain they helped in the
-observatory in working the great sector to determine the position of
-some stars. Two stone-cutters of the number were detached from the
-Kamiesberg to Zwartland and Groenekloof to cut and build a pillar of
-stone at each end of the line, to mark the termini of the
-newly-measured base; and all, as the general service of the
-expedition permitted, erected at every fixed point a strong pile
-twenty feet high, secured to a base of twenty feet, to indicate the
-sites of the several trigonometrical stations.
-
-Sergeant Hemming, before the close of the duty, was sent by the
-colonial astronomer on a reconnoitring excursion to discover a track
-from the neighbourhood of St. Helena Bay along the mountain range to
-the eastward, to Cape L’Agulhas on the coast. He was out fourteen
-days exploring the country, but from its inaccessible nature
-returned not only disappointed and exhausted, but unsuccessful.[457]
-In March, 1844, his connection with the astronomical department
-ceased.[458]
-
------
-
-Footnote 457:
-
- Ibid., p. 33.
-
-Footnote 458:
-
- These particulars are chiefly collected from a paper by sergeant
- Hemming in the ‘Royal Engineer Professional Papers,’ i., pp.
- 31-39. This non-commissioned officer was pensioned at 1_s._ 8_d._
- a-day, in May, 1845. Of his survey services Colonel Portlock gives
- an interesting outline in his prefatory remarks to the sergeant’s
- paper. His duties appear to have been confined chiefly to the
- mountains of Ireland, where in winter he was exposed to fearful
- inclemency and subjected to much hardship. “On one occasion,” says
- the Colonel, “I had to place a young gentleman, who had graduated
- at Cambridge, under the sergeant for instruction, to whose zeal,
- intelligence, and respectability the pupil warmly bore testimony.
- Before receiving his discharge, he was appointed clerk and
- storekeeper to the road department in Cape Town, and some idea of
- the responsibility of his office may be inferred from the fact
- that he expended in four years, 1844-48, upwards of 36,000_l._!”
-
------
-
-The detachment at the Falkland Islands continued throughout the year
-to labour in the establishment of the new settlement at Port
-William, which was situated on the south side of Jackson’s Harbour,
-and sloped from the shore to a ridge of rocks about a quarter of a
-mile inland. Notwithstanding the stormy character of the seasons,
-the detachment constructed three good jetties, made roads and
-pathways, and formed several ditches to drain the land and mark the
-different boundaries. They also erected and finished with interior
-fitments, the Governor’s house, and besides building a temporary
-barracks for the party with workshops and other convenient premises
-attached, small commodious cottages were run up for persons in
-official employment. Of the services and intelligence of sergeant
-Hearnden the Governor wrote in terms of unqualified praise. Both as
-a soldier and private individual, the influence of his example was
-felt in the colony, and he is stated to have been in an eminent
-degree faithful and successful in the discharge of his duty. Most of
-the men were also well spoken of for their excellent behaviour and
-zeal; and amid the innumerable inconveniences of their situation and
-services, they maintained their military character and discipline
-unimpaired. This was the more commendable as the temptation to
-drunkenness—the prevailing vice in the colony—was, from the absence
-of the common recreations so usual in England, and the inclemency of
-the weather, almost irresistible.
-
-On the 16th February, forty-four rank and file embarked for Bermuda
-under the command of Lieutenant C. R. Binney, R.E., to fill up the
-vacancies occasioned by the epidemic in the previous year, and
-landed from the ‘Prince George’ transport on the 8th April. Corporal
-David Harris, the chief military diver, under Major-General Pasley
-at Spithead, was in subordinate charge of the party.
-
-Sir Robert Wilson, the Governor of Gibraltar, inspected the
-companies of the corps at the fortress in common with the other
-troops under his command, in May and October, and on each occasion
-made flattering allusion to their conduct and discipline. On the
-13th May, after some general remarks of commendation, Sir Robert
-Wilson adds—“All the corps and battalions merited unqualified
-approbation, and the Governor bestows it with pride and pleasure.
-The royal sappers and miners, however, whose laborious daily duties
-occupy their whole time, except the afternoons of alternate
-Saturdays, deserve, without any invidious preference, particular
-commendation for preserving a soldier-like mien, and exercising as
-if they had been in the habit of daily practice.” And again, on the
-13th October, he wrote:—“The practice of the royal artillery
-yesterday was highly satisfactory and impressive, and the royal
-sappers and miners, including the detachment which arrived only the
-night before, presented under arms an appearance and proficiency
-which corresponded with the character established by the capacity
-and assiduous labours that have distinguished this corps during its
-employment on the works of the fortifications since the Governor has
-had the honour to command.”
-
-Early in May, Major-General Pasley resumed, for the sixth and last
-time, his operations at Spithead. Lieutenant H. W. Barlow, R.E., was
-the executive officer under whose charge were placed sergeant George
-Lindsay and thirteen rank and file of the corps, with an equal
-number of the East India Company’s sappers, and a strong force of
-seamen, riggers, &c. The removal of the ‘Royal George,’
-notwithstanding that there still remained nineteen guns of that
-wreck at the bottom, was reported to be perfectly accomplished, and
-the roadstead quite safe for the anchorage of shipping. The
-Major-General, therefore, turned his attention to the recovery of
-the guns of the ‘Edgar’ man-of-war, which was blown up at Spithead
-in 1711. She had been armed with 70 guns, technically termed
-demi-cannons, sakers, and falconets. The first were 32 and
-12-pounders; and the others respectively 9 and 6-pounders. The great
-mass of timber, embedded in mud, composing the centre of the hull of
-the wreck, was discovered by corporal Richard P. Jones on the 23rd
-May. The sweeps from the boat having been caught by an obstruction
-below, Jones descended by them till he found himself astride a
-32-pounder iron gun, which was peeping through a port-hole on the
-lower deck. It happened at the time to be unusually clear at the
-bottom, and to his amazement there stood upright before him the
-midship portion of the vessel, with an altitude above the general
-level of the ground, of thirteen feet and a half. From the open
-ports, in two tiers, yawned the mouths of about twelve pieces of
-ordnance, grim and deformed with the incrustations of 133 years.
-This part of the ‘Edgar’ was not much shaken by the explosions, but
-when the fore and after magazines took fire, the head and stern of
-the vessel were blown away from the body and scattered to distances
-exceeding three hundred fathoms. So violent indeed had been one of
-the explosions, that the best bower anchor was not only broken in
-fragments, but its flukes and shank were separated from each other,
-nearly half-a-mile. The midships, sharing but little in the
-convulsion, went down like a colossal millstone, scarcely heeling on
-her bottom; and the armament of the decks remained as if ready for
-battle, without a carriage unjerked from its platform, or a gun from
-its carriage. All the woodwork, however, was so completely decayed
-by the ravages of worms, and the insidious action of the sea, that
-when the guns were slung, they were hauled through the decks, as if
-no obstruction interposed.[459]
-
------
-
-Footnote 459:
-
- A few minutes elapsed before Jones quitted the hobby-horse he was
- exultingly riding. Meanwhile curious to explore the gun, he thrust
- his hand up the bore, where a member of the crustacean family,
- already in quiet possession of the apartment, and not over-pleased
- with the unceremonious intrusion, fiercely disputed the passage.
- Jones, unwilling to yield, did his best to capture the exasperated
- crab, but its inveterate shears had so nipped and lacerated his
- hand, he was forced, at last, to beat a retreat. Ever after, the
- cruel wounds inflicted upon him by this peevish red-coat, had the
- effect of fixing in Jones’s memory, the date of his discovery of
- the ‘Edgar.’
-
- It may strike the reader as remarkable that for the six summers of
- the operations at Spithead the divers were seldom attacked by any
- of the finny tribe; nor was it their privilege ever to meet in
- their subaqueous labours with any fishes larger than those
- ordinarily supplied for traffic in the markets. A lobster, a crab,
- or a conger-eel would now and then exhibit a wish to break lances
- with the intruders, but beyond these few instances of piscatorial
- interference, the under-water men had little reason to complain of
- the ungenerous treatment of the inhabitants of the deep.
-
- More than once Jones was threatened or assaulted by crustacea. As
- on one occasion he was traversing for guns, a lobster, measuring
- not less than sixteen inches in length, approached him with so
- quick a motion, it seemed as if a bird were hovering round him.
- Thus attracted, he stood still to learn a fact or two in the
- history of its habits. The lobster stared inquisitively at Jones,
- as if to discover what the strange phenomenon could be. Apparently
- dissatisfied with the extent of the information it had acquired,
- it darted off like an arrow, using its fanlike tail as a rudder to
- shape its course. Its movements were sharp and rapid—its track in
- circles, each less than the other, till poising for a while within
- a few feet of the diver, it settled warily on the ground to resume
- observations. Startled by an action of the phenomenon, the lobster
- sailed off again in concentric circles, swishing the fan furiously
- to augment its speed; then, reaching the ground it spread out its
- feelers and claws and was soon engrossed in a brown study.
- Accepting the series of evolutions as a challenge, Jones prepared
- for the combat. Gently lifting his pricker, so as not to excite
- the instinctive suspicions of the lobster, he suddenly plunged it
- forward and pinned his antagonist to the earth. Instantly grasping
- it with his powerful hand behind the claws, Jones hurried on deck,
- and its body, weighing as much as a young goose, furnished a
- luxurious banquet for the captor and his friends.
-
- Another lobster, less inquisitive but more combatative, advanced
- upon Jones with true military boldness. Having performed the magic
- circles, it was evident that the fish in armour had taken the
- measure of its opponent. Pushing out its claws in front like a
- couple of blunt spears, the lobster furiously battered against
- Jones’s legs, which, being cased in flannel, Mackintosh cloth, and
- impenetrable canvas, were proof against scars and punctures. Thick
- and fast came the blows, as from a ram or catapult; and it
- occurring to Jones that there was a chance of damage to his shins
- if the contest were prolonged, he turned upon his intrepid enemy,
- and with one kick from his leaden toe, broke up its morion and
- cuirass and gained the victory.
-
- At another time, when Jones was busy making fast to a gun, a
- conger eel curled up in its muzzle forced out its slimy head to
- reconnoitre. Not relishing its savage attitude, Jones considered
- it best to make short work of the interview, and striking it on
- the cranium, the eel recoiled within its lurking place. A tompion
- being handy, Jones took it up and plugged up the bore. The gun in
- due time was hauled on deck, and on removing the tompion, the eel
- floundered out, and though small for a conger—about four feet
- long—it fought desperately, and was with great difficulty captured
- and decapitated.
-
------
-
-Before the close of the season, the whole of this mass was got up,
-by the continual removal of pieces loosened by frequent small
-explosions. Almost the whole of the keel was likewise sent up, with
-innumerable fragments of timber, spars, &c., and many guns, eight of
-which had been recovered in one week. The first was found by
-corporal Jones. A great number of sinkers or large stones, by which
-the wreck buoys were moored, and a number of small anchors were also
-recovered. In the early part of August the operations were much
-retarded by some very violent gales, preventing the divers working
-from time to time; but as soon as the weather moderated, corporal
-Jones, with his usual zeal, taking down with him a large crate, sent
-up at one haul, besides a load of staves of casks, &c., ninety-one
-shot of various sizes. The guns of the ‘Edgar’ were much scattered
-at the bottom by the explosion of her magazines, and the unexpected
-distances to which they were thrown, rendered a more extended sphere
-of action necessary. This was effected by a simple arrangement of
-ropes as guides, upon which worked a transverse line just over the
-bed of the roadstead, that caught in its track any object rearing
-itself above the general level. In this way the entire area of the
-bottom, supposed to conceal any of the fugitive cannons, was
-traversed, Jones and Sticklen being the operators; and was attended
-with so much success, that nearly the whole of the guns and wreck
-were sent up and deposited in the dockyard before the 31st October,
-when the season closed. The party rejoined the corps at Woolwich on
-the 2nd November.[460]
-
------
-
-Footnote 460:
-
- The ‘Times,’ August 19, 1844.
-
------
-
-In addition to Jones, the divers were John Girvan, Donald McFarlane,
-Philip Trevail, and William Frame, besides four of the East India
-Company and five others occasionally.[461]
-
------
-
-Footnote 461:
-
- These were sergeants Reid and Clarke, and privates Sticklen,
- Herbert, McDonald, Vallely, Canard, Robertson, Gillies, Mais, and
- Whelan. Clarke sent up two guns, Sticklen six, Herbert five and a
- half, and McDonald two. Sticklen, the most successful diver of the
- batch, met with an accident. In pulling him up from the bottom, he
- was drawn against some hard substance, which broke one of the side
- eyes of his helmet. His dress instantly filled, and the water
- rushed into his mouth. So quickly however was his removal to the
- deck accomplished, that his struggles for relief were short, and
- the injury he received was scarcely more than a temporary
- inconvenience.
-
------
-
-During the season corporal Jones got up nineteen guns, besides an
-immense pile of other articles in endless variety; and when the
-rough and generally unfavourable state of the weather which
-prevailed is taken into account, his activity and industry appear
-strikingly prominent. “Whatever success,” writes General Pasley,
-“has attended our operations, is chiefly to be attributed to the
-exertions of corporal Jones, of whom as a diver I cannot speak too
-highly.”[462]
-
------
-
-Footnote 462:
-
- With the reputation of being the best diver in Europe, he sailed
- for China in February, 1845. In April, 1847, he was present in the
- expedition to Canton, and took part in the capture of the Bogue
- and other forts. Soon after he was reduced from sergeant, but his
- energy of character and perseverance brought him again into
- favour, and he is now a sergeant in the corps. He was present
- during the summer of 1854 at the capture of the Aland Islands,
- including the demolition of the forts of Bomarsund. After his
- return from the Baltic he was placed at the disposal of Mr.
- Goldsworthy Gurney of the House of Commons, to learn the
- properties and management of a brilliant light that gentleman had
- discovered, and which he proposed to use in the trenches before
- Sebastopol to exhibit the enemy, at night, in their works. The
- experiments were carried out under the auspices of Lord Panmure;
- and the sergeant evinced so complete an acquaintance with its
- principles, that the inventor determined to intrust him with its
- use in the field. Submitted, however, for trial with rival lights
- to a committee at Woolwich, it was soon seen that its results did
- not equal its pretensions, inasmuch as the light at a distance was
- far less intense than in the vicinity of the operator. In this way
- sergeant Jones was relieved from a nightly exhibition, which would
- have made him a certain mark for the enemy to shoot at. On the
- occasion of the trial he also used the Drummond light, a twin
- invention with that of Mr. Gurney. The third light was an electric
- flame; all of which were condemned for the sole and sufficient
- reason that our own workmen would have been more exposed by the
- illumination than those of the garrison. Sergeant Jones served
- subsequently in the Crimea.
-
------
-
-Corporal Girvan was also very successful as a diver while health
-permitted, but he was prevented from rendering any particular
-assistance after the 27th July, from an accident occasioned by the
-air-pipe of his apparatus blowing off the pump on deck. He was aware
-that something had gone wrong, and making the signal, was drawn up
-sensible, but much injured about the throat and head, and blood was
-flowing copiously from his mouth and ears. The air rushed violently
-out of his helmet, as if no safety valve had been attached to it.
-This arose from the valve not having been taken to pieces since the
-commencement of the season, and, moreover, being clogged with
-verdigris, could not be properly shut, and hence the air was enabled
-to escape.[463]
-
------
-
-Footnote 463:
-
- The ‘Times,’ August 19, 1844.
-
------
-
-Private John Skelton, so frequently praised for his ingenuity as a
-workman and for his daring as a diver, was during the operations
-drowned by accident off Southsea Castle.
-
-The conduct and exertions of the whole detachment were flatteringly
-spoken of by Major-General Pasley, particularly sergeant
-Lindsay,[464] who, next to the officer in command, had the chief
-superintendence. Corporal John Rae[465] and private Alexander
-Cleghorn were also named for their intelligence and services in the
-management of the voltaic batteries and firing of the charges, and
-their duties, next to the divers, were the most important. The
-divers occasionally went down as many as twenty times in a tide, and
-the remuneration of each was from 1_s._ 3_d._ to 2_s._ a tide,
-besides the usual working pay of 1_s._ a-day. This enabled each
-first-class diver to realize between 5_s._ and 6_s._ a-day,
-exclusive of his regimental allowances.
-
------
-
-Footnote 464:
-
- Discharged with a pension of 1_s._ 10_d._ a-day, in April, 1848,
- and obtained from the Surveyor-General of Prisons the appointment
- of foreman over the contractors, on the part of the Government, at
- 5_s._ a-day. Subsequently he was removed by promotion to be
- foreman of works in the convict establishment at Woolwich, which
- embrace the supervision of the convicts working both in the
- arsenal and dock-yard. His salary, with rent and rations, exceeded
- 130_l._ a-year. He now fills a similar situation at Chatham, with
- a more lucrative recompense.
-
-Footnote 465:
-
- Subsequently became a sergeant, and was employed on special duty
- at Round Down Cliff, Dover, and in the drainage works at Windsor.
- After passing five terms at Sandhurst, he was rewarded for his
- intelligence and good service, with a case of drawing instruments;
- and in September, 1848, was promoted to the rank of staff-sergeant
- at the College. Several interesting models, made by himself, of
- military importance, he presented to that institution.
-
------
-
-The royal mail steamer ‘Tay,’ on her passage to Bermuda, sustained
-some damage to her bottom by running a-shore on the Cuban coast. On
-her arrival at Bermuda on the 16th August, corporal Harris was
-employed to examine her. Supplied with a diving-helmet and suit from
-the dockyard, he went down and found part of her cutwater and keel
-and about twelve feet of planking on her starboard side carried
-away. Forty-one times he dived in repairing the injury, and in three
-days so effectually finished his work that the vessel was enabled to
-return safely to England with the mails.
-
-By an order from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, then Lord
-Stanley, this non-commissioned officer was attached, late in the
-year, to the department of the Naval Inspector of Works at Bermuda,
-for the purpose of removing, by submarine mining, coral reefs from
-the entrances of harbours, so as to make them accessible to ordinary
-vessels. Lieutenant-Colonel Reid, R.E., the Governor of the Island,
-carried on a correspondence which extended over a period of eighteen
-months, to obtain the services of this diver.[466] The first work
-undertaken by him was widening and deepening the ship channel
-leading into the harbour of St. George. For three or four years he
-confined his exertions to this point, and so well planned and
-skilfully executed were his operations that all natural impediments
-militating against the safety of the channel, were at length
-completely removed by the explosions of innumerable charges of
-gunpowder, fired through the agency of voltaic electricity. Under
-Colonel Barry, the commanding royal engineer who had the
-superintendence of the service for most of the period, the work was
-successfully prosecuted. The spaciousness of the channel for the
-passage of steam-vessels of large tonnage and great draught of
-water, was practically tested on the 26th February, 1848, by Her
-Majesty’s steamer ‘Growler,’ of 1,200 tons, Captain Hall. The vessel
-steamed into the harbour against wind and tide, drawing fifteen and
-one-third feet of water, and effected the passage with ease and
-steadiness, having beneath her keel when passing “the bar,” the
-worst part of the channel, at least five feet of water.[467] These
-signally successful operations saved the Government several
-thousands of pounds; and in the event of Hamilton losing its
-commercial importance, the harbour of St. George will, no doubt, be
-selected as the chief water for the passage of the mails and the
-trade and marine of the Islands.
-
------
-
-Footnote 466:
-
- ‘Second Report, Army and Ordnance Expenditure,’ 1849, p. 617.
-
-Footnote 467:
-
- The ‘Bermudian,’ March, 1848.
-
------
-
-At Chatham, late in the year, some mining operations were carried on
-under Colonel Sir Frederick Smith, the director of the royal
-engineer establishment. The works were pushed under the glacis in
-front of the left face of the ravelin, and the right face of the
-Duke of Cumberland’s Bastion. All the corps at the station, with the
-East India Company’s sappers, were present, working night and day in
-three reliefs of six hours each, and the numerous explosions that
-took place, and the attempts made to render abortive the schemes of
-opposing parties, invested the operations with the character in many
-essential respects of subterranean warfare. The exciting
-experiments, however, were not concluded without casualty, for on
-one occasion from inhaling foul air, a sapper of the East India
-Company named James Sullivan was killed, and three of the royal
-sappers were drawn out in a state of dangerous insensibility. These
-were privates John Murphy, John A. Harris, and Edward Bailey.
-Lieutenant Moggeridge, R.E., who had charge of the party, also
-fainted, but he was saved from serious injury by colour-sergeant
-George Shepherd rushing into the gallery and bringing him out. At
-the time of the accident, the miners were about one hundred and
-fifty feet from the mouth of the shaft; and several who went in to
-rescue their comrades suffered more or less from the air. Singular,
-however, as it may appear, lights were burning near the ground the
-whole time, and instantly after the last man was carried out of the
-gallery, it was traversed in its whole length by lance-corporal John
-Wood,[468] who carried a light in his hand and experienced no great
-difficulty in breathing.[469]
-
------
-
-Footnote 468:
-
- Joined the corps from the military asylum at Chelsea. By his
- attainments and merits he was in time promoted to the rank of
- corporal. His career, however, was marked by occasional
- intemperance, which at length settled into confirmed drunkenness
- and mental eccentricity. Unable to control his propensity to
- intoxication, he became a useless soldier, and after twenty years'
- service was discharged without a pension. He is now a vagrant and
- a beggar.
-
-Footnote 469:
-
- ‘Professional Papers,’ viii., pp. 156-180, in which will be found
- an interesting detail of the operations.
-
------
-
-The Hong Kong party under Major Aldrich, R.E., was inspected in the
-autumn by Major-General D’Aguilar, C.B., in command of the troops in
-China; and his Excellency in his official report “regretted that a
-detachment of so much importance, and so well constituted, should
-have been reduced by six deaths and three invalided during the half
-year, and that the men present should, in their appearance, show the
-effects of climate.” In December following the detachment was
-ordered to be increased to a half company, and the reinforcement of
-fifteen rank and file, sailing from the West India Docks in the
-‘William Shand’ freight-ship, in February, 1845, landed at Victoria
-on the 28th June following. In May, 1851, the party returned to
-England, but its strength was reduced by casualties to six men only.
-Of the remainder, four were invalided, three died, one was drowned
-on passage from Victoria to Macao, and one was killed by falling
-over a precipice.
-
-
-
-
- 1845.
-
-Sheerness—Increase to the corps at the Cape—Survey of Windsor—Skill
- of privates Holland and Hogan as draughtsmen—Etchings by the
- latter for the Queen and Prince Albert—Unique idea of the use of a
- bullet—Inspection at Gibraltar by Sir Robert Wilson—Falkland
- Islands—Discharges on the survey duty during the railway mania.
-
-
-On the 15th May twelve rank and file were detached to Sheerness,
-and, with little variation in its strength, continued to work there
-till April, 1849. The men were employed at their trades, and
-assisted in carrying out some boring experiments to ascertain the
-nature of the strata. Corporal Charles Hawkins, who discharged the
-duty of foreman of works, was highly spoken of for his activity and
-ability, and the men were praised for their good conduct and
-exertions.
-
-A company was added to the strength of the corps at the Cape of Good
-Hope by the arrival from Woolwich of the ninth company under the
-command of Captain R. Howorth, R.E., on the 20th August. On landing
-at Algoa Bay, the reinforcement was removed to the different
-military posts on the frontier.[470] The two companies in the colony
-now reached a total of 174 of all ranks. This addition to the
-command did not occasion an augmentation to the corps, but reduced
-one company of the disposable force at home.
-
------
-
-Footnote 470:
-
- The voyage was full of incident. On the freight-ship, ‘Gilbert
- Henderson,’ sailing from Woolwich, the crew mutinied and left her
- at the Nore. A fresh crew, chiefly foreigners, unable to speak
- English, was engaged, and soon after putting to sea, the ship took
- fire, but the exertions of the company soon extinguished it. Near
- Dungeness she ran on a sand-bank, but by working all night, she
- was got off. When about a fortnight’s sail from Port Elizabeth,
- she was overtaken by a heavy squall, which carried away the
- greater part of her gear, and her fore and main masts. To complete
- the chapter of accidents, the disembarkation took place in a heavy
- surf, and as boats refused to venture out, the men, women, and
- children were borne to land on the backs of nude blacks.
-
------
-
-The survey of Windsor, including the Home Park, Castle, Frogmore,
-and the Royal Gardens, undertaken by Her Majesty’s command in 1843
-by a party of about twenty non-commissioned officers and men of the
-survey companies, was completed in the summer of this year. Captain
-Tucker, R.E., had the direction of the work, and colour-sergeant
-Joseph Smith the executive charge. The drawings were accurately and
-very beautifully executed on a scale of five feet to a mile, which
-admitted of the fretwork of the ceilings being penned in for each
-apartment of the castle. So exquisitely was the work performed, that
-the drawings by privates Charles Holland[471] and Patrick S.
-Hogan[472] were constantly mistaken for engravings; and Prince
-Albert, to mark his approbation of their merits, presented each with
-a useful and elegant case of mathematical drawing instruments. The
-plans were made to show the contour levels at every four vertical
-feet above and two vertical feet below the flood-line of 1841.
-Several sectional plans were also executed by the party to assist
-Sir Henry de la Beche in the drainage of the town and castle, which,
-at the time, was considered very defective. The plan for the office
-of Woods and Forests, designed with a view to the improvement of the
-sewerage, was drawn on a sheet eleven feet square; and a reduced
-plan was also drawn for the library of the Prince Consort. His Royal
-Highness and other distinguished personages frequently visited the
-office to view the progress of the work, and never quitted without
-graciously commending the party for their zeal and proficiency.
-
------
-
-Footnote 471:
-
- Became second-corporal, and after being pensioned in April, 1847,
- returned as a draughtsman to the ordnance map office at
- Southampton. He is, perhaps, the best man of his class in the
- department, and his drawings are always executed with fidelity and
- beauty. Frequently their neatness, and richness of colouring and
- ornament, give them an effect truly artistic and pictorial.
-
-Footnote 472:
-
- Made an etching of the ‘Adelaide Oak,’ in the Home Park, which,
- submitted by Sir Henry de la Beche to Lord Liverpool, obtained for
- him a complimentary introduction to Prince Albert. His Royal
- Highness accepted the etching, and expressed himself much pleased
- with the beauty and minuteness of the execution.—‘Morning Post,’
- Saturday, August 19, 1843. The tree had a pretty seat hut nearly
- half round the bottom of its trunk, and in another part of it was
- a remarkable hollow occasioned by time. Her Majesty the Queen
- Dowager had been known frequently to sit reading under its ample
- shade, and on that account it was considered to be her favourite
- oak. Hogan afterwards presented, through Colonel Wylde, an etching
- of the ‘Victoria Oak,’ in the Green Park, to the Prince; and His
- Royal Highness, in thanking the giver, expressed the admiration he
- felt for his talents as an artist, and rewarded him with the sum
- of 5_l_. These handsome pair of etchings are now the property of
- Her Majesty. Hogan never received promotion in the corps, as he
- was unqualified for command; and being discharged, on the usual
- pension in January, 1845, soon afterwards emigrated to South
- Australia.
-
- An anecdote, which is unique in its way, may be added of this good
- easy man. At Trinity College, Dublin, he had gained prizes as an
- artist, but when he enlisted, was as ignorant of the use of
- fire-arms as a child. Having fired blank cartridge in the usual
- routine of drill, he was considered to be ripe enough to enter
- upon the more advanced stage of firing ball. Accordingly, with
- others of his company, he was ordered to attend this instructional
- duty. When directed to prime and load, he was observed to separate
- the bullet from the cartridge and throw it away. Sergeant Hilton,
- who had charge of the party, picked up the discarded bullet; and
- on asking Hogan his reason for biting it off, he replied, “Sure,
- sir, I didn’t know that the knob was of any use!”
-
-Sir Robert Wilson inspected the companies at Gibraltar in October,
-and when he concluded, was pleased to convey the expression of his
-satisfaction in these words, “that on parade, they showed they had
-duly attended to their military acquirements whilst employed at
-work, which,” he added, “will be a lasting monument to their
-merits.”
-
-The Falkland Islands' detachment was still toiling in the formation
-of the colony, subjected to all the inconveniences and vicissitudes
-of a bad and depressing climate. Their duties embraced every variety
-of hard and laborious service, such as making excavations, drains,
-roads, jetties, building houses, huts, &c. Carrying heavy burdens of
-stores, and loading and unloading boats, were among their roughest
-tasks, accompanied as they were with the necessity of wading in the
-water on sharp stony beaches, which destroyed in a week or two the
-strongest boots. The wear and tear of clothes was almost ruinous;
-and to make up for the expenses incurred in replacing them, and in
-purchasing provisions which were dear, working pay, exclusive of
-regimental allowances, was granted to the men from 1_s._ 6_d._ to
-4_s._ 6_d._ a-day. The sergeant received the highest rate, the
-privates the lowest. In winter they lived mostly in tents, with snow
-around and a humid soil beneath; and being constantly at work out of
-doors, they frequently returned at night, wet through, to a small
-cheerless fire, never lending heat enough to dry their dripping
-clothes. At times they were on short allowance; and when flour was
-selling at 6_l._ 10_s._ per barrel of 192 lbs., the men were glad of
-the chance of buying a small handkerchief-full of damaged biscuit
-for 4_s._ 4_d._ To the recklessness of a wretched and lawless
-community, composed of men of the lowest class, was opposed the five
-or six gentlemen in official appointments and the sappers. The
-latter, however, from constantly working with them, were incessantly
-exposed to every kind of evil influence; and without amusement or
-subjects of interest to occupy their attention in the intervals of
-labour, four of the party gradually yielded to the prevailing
-corruption and were removed from the settlement. The residue were
-highly commended for their “esprit de corps,” and sergeant Hearnden
-in particular, for his admirable conduct, was specially noticed in
-the Governor’s despatches to the Secretary of State for the
-Colonies. The sergeant’s trials were very great, his exertions
-unflagging, and his unrestricted devotion of every hour to the
-public weal was frequently warmly acknowledged by the Governor.
-
-A mania for railways set in this year which caused an excessive
-demand for surveyors to trace and survey the lines. This occasioned
-the withdrawal of more than 200 civil assistants and about 60
-labourers, besides 1 sergeant, 1 corporal, 6 second-corporals, and
-19 privates, who were discharged from the survey companies at their
-own request. Many of those who quitted, possessed superior abilities
-as surveyors and draughtsmen. The offers made were too tempting to
-be resisted; and some of the men secured employment, which enabled
-them to realize an income of more than six guineas a-week. To make
-up for the loss in the survey force, Colonel Colby proposed the
-augmentation of another company for the duty; but the measure was
-not acceded to till April, 1848.
-
-
-
-
- 1846.
-
-Boundary surveys in North America—Duties of the party engaged in
- it—Mode of ascertaining longitudes—Trials of the party; Owen
- Lonergan—The sixty-four mile line—Official recognition of its
- services—Sergeant James Mulligan—Kaffir war—Corporal B.
- Castledine—Parties employed at the guns—Graham’s Town—Fort
- Brown—Patrols—Bridge over the Fish River—Field services with the
- second division—Dodo’s kraal—Waterloo Bay—Field services with
- the first division—Patrol under Lieutenant Bourchier—Mutiny of
- the Swellandam native infantry—Conduct of corps in the
- campaign—Alterations in the dress—Drainage of Windsor—Detachment
- to Hudson’s Bay—Its organization—Journey to Fort Garry—Sergeant
- Philip Clark—Private R. Penton—Corporal T. Macpherson—Lower Fort
- Garry—Particular services—Return to England.
-
-
-The survey of the boundary between the British possessions in North
-America and the United States, as settled by the treaty of
-Washington, was completed this year. Six non-commissioned officers
-selected for the duty embarked at Liverpool in April, 1843, and
-landing at Boston, thence re-embarked on board a coasting steamer,
-and sailed to St. John’s, New Brunswick. By boat they then passed on
-to Fredericton, and on the 1st June commenced operations at the
-Grand Falls. All were dressed in plain clothes. Corporals James
-Mulligan, Daniel Rock, and Alfred Garnham had been for three months
-at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich, and were instructed in the
-mode of making and computing such astronomical observations, as were
-considered best suited to the service to be performed.[473] Very
-soon the detachment “drew forth the praise and admiration of the
-American party. The Americans,” adds the despatch, “had no persons
-to stand in the place of them.” So useful were they found in the
-service, that, in the second season, when the work of the commission
-had to be extended, the detachment was increased to twenty men of
-all ranks.[474]
-
------
-
-Footnote 473:
-
- ‘Military Annual,’ 1844. ‘Corps Papers,’ i., p. 107.
-
-Footnote 474:
-
- ‘Corps Papers,’ i., p. 107.
-
------
-
-Captains Broughton, Robinson, and Pipon, R.E., commanded the party
-under Lieutenant-Colonel Estcourt, the chief commissioner; and at
-the close of the second season, the survey had so far progressed,
-that nine men were removed from the duty, and arrived at Woolwich in
-January, 1845. The services of three other men were dispensed with
-at the close of 1845, and reaching head-quarters in December, they
-were followed, on the 9th July, 1846, by four more. Three were
-discharged in Canada, and the twentieth man, corporal Garnham,
-arrived in England 10th September, 1846.
-
-A few details of this international service would seem to be
-required to explain the nature of the duties intrusted to the men.
-Having once entered the woods, the survey was continued without
-interruption, until the termination of the out-door operations of
-1845. Occasionally the men worked in concert with the officers of
-the United States' topographical engineers. Two non-commissioned
-officers were constantly employed under Captains Robinson and Pipon,
-in taking and calculating observations for latitudes and longitudes,
-and for absolute longitudes by lunar transits and culminating stars,
-to discover the azimuthal bearings of the line, as pointed out by
-the treaty of Washington. They also ascertained the comparative
-heights of astronomical stations, &c., at various points of the line
-from barometrical observations. One non-commissioned officer for
-many months was attached to the American party to see that they
-effected their survey according to the treaty; one carried the
-chronometers between the astronomical camps; and the remainder were
-employed singly in charge of large parties of labourers and axemen,
-carrying on the general business of marking out the boundary, and of
-surveying and levelling it. Embraced in the operations also was the
-survey of the waters, roads, and other prominent objects in the
-vicinity of the line, essential to the discovery of the boundary, at
-any time, by reference to the natural features of the country; and
-when the survey closed in 1845, seven of the party were, for more
-than eight months, stationed with the commission at Washington,
-engaged in the duty of computing and registering astronomical
-observations, also in laying down and plotting the work and
-finishing the plans of the line.
-
-The process of surveying and levelling is too well known to need
-notice, but it may be desirable to afford an idea of one
-description of work, to show in what respect assistance was given
-to obtain the longitude of a particular place. Between the
-northwest branch-station and Quebec, it was required to ascertain
-the difference of longitude; but as the usual method of finding it
-by the interchange of chronometers could not be resorted to, a
-hill some twenty miles away from the branch station, which could
-be seen from Quebec, was selected as the station for an observing
-party. Captain Pipon, therefore, left the woods, and established
-his transit instrument on the Plains of Abraham. With a pocket
-chronometer, tent, provisions, gunpowder, &c., sergeant Bernard
-M‘Guckin removed to a range of hills from the station above Lake
-Ishæganalshegeck, and encamped himself and his labourers on the
-highest point of the range, which was covered to the top with
-dense wood. Climbing the height, and finding he could see back to
-the Lake Hill and forward to Quebec, he set his labourers to clear
-away the summit, except one high tree which he stript of all the
-leaves and branches likely to intercept the free range of the
-observations. At the base of this tree he constructed a high
-platform, and every evening for two hours, at intervals of ten
-minutes, the sergeant fired flashes of gunpowder, by hoisting the
-charge, with the assistance of a pulley, to the top of the tree
-with a burning slow match attached. The quantity of powder used
-for each flash varied from a quarter to half a pound. Some of the
-nights the wind blew strongly, and the charge exploded before
-reaching the top of the tree. On a clear night the flashes could
-be seen with the naked eye at the Quebec observatory, forty miles
-distant. Simultaneous observations were made on six different
-evenings, and forty-six flashes were noted, sufficient to give a
-good difference of longitude. The result of the experiment was
-most successful. An attempt was afterwards made to find the
-difference of longitude between the stations, by the transmission
-of chronometers; but the effect deduced was worthless compared
-with that obtained from the flashes. These observations were a
-part of the scheme for tracing the straight sixty-four mile line
-of boundary from the outlet of Lake Pohenagamook to the hill
-station on Lake Ishæganalshegeck. When the observations were
-completed, Captain Robinson left the woods and placed his
-chronometers in charge of a non-commissioned officer of sappers at
-Montreal, who wound them up and compared them during the
-winter.[475]
-
------
-
-Footnote 475:
-
- ‘Corps Papers,’ i., pp. 125, 126, 155.
-
------
-
-The accuracy of this means of observation was further tested on the
-western portion of the line ending at St. Regis by the operations of
-corporal Bastard. In August, 1845, having selected the highest
-summit on Mount Rougement, near Chambly, for a station, he
-reciprocated flashes with Major Graham of the U. S. topographical
-engineers at Rouse’s Point, with great precision and success.[476]
-The same was done by corporal Thomas Forbes from the top of Jay’s
-Peak in Vermont, who flashed at ten-minute intervals from the
-surface of a piece of flat board. In six fine nights eighty flashes
-were observed in common. These series of observations connected the
-points of St. Regis and St. Helen’s, and the latter again with
-Rouse’s, testing at the same time the difference of longitude
-between the several stations.[477]
-
------
-
-Footnote 476:
-
- Ibid., i., p. 155.
-
-Footnote 477:
-
- Ibid., i., p. 128.
-
------
-
-When not in tents, a sort of hut constructed on the spot was the
-only habitation of the surveyors, and twigs of the spruce tree,
-felled by the axemen, formed their bed. They had good blankets and
-warm clothing; but such was the severity of the weather, and such
-the inconvenience of their bivouac, that frequently in the morning
-they arose for work either with stiffened limbs, or soaked with
-melted snow. For the most part, however, the detachment was free
-from sickness despite the intense cold in winter, and the great heat
-in summer. Locked as they were in a thick forest, covered by an
-impenetrable foliage, the oppressive heat of midsummer was almost
-insupportable. In the spring scurvy was common among them,
-accompanied with sore gums, loose teeth, discoloured legs, and
-emaciated frames, but some well-known simple specifics soon restored
-them to health.[478] Only one man became an invalid on the duty,
-arising from an injury he sustained by falling from a shelving bank,
-on account of which he was sent home and discharged.
-
------
-
-Footnote 478:
-
- ‘Corps Papers,’ i., p. 108, 109.
-
------
-
-The royal engineers with their sappers and assistants were the first
-to penetrate these wilds and the first to open a way through their
-mazes. Scrambling through an unbroken forest with snow-shoes on,
-interrupted at every step by stunted underwood, not a little
-augmented their fatigues. Often the snow was hip deep; and when the
-melting commenced, the obstacles and toils of travelling became
-greater. The snow-shoes then became useless, and yet without them
-the men sank above their knees in half-thawed snow, and then had to
-wade through the swamp. Streams in those seasons became rivers, and
-rivers deep torrents; and such was the difficulty of pushing through
-the snow, that one party was four days going ten miles.[479]
-Difficulties like these were more especially felt in the region
-embraced within the “sixty-four mile line.” A vast prairie it was,
-thickly overgrown with tangled bush, undisturbed for centuries, by
-the axe of industry. The full influence of many a storm, however,
-had beaten down the forest and levelled trees too old to bear its
-blast. These lay across the track intersected and confused, just as
-the wind had blown them; and the dense bush, climbing over the aged
-trunks, so matted the vegetation, that the trials of travelling were
-only overshot by the general hardships of the enterprise. There were
-perils too encountered of a serious character, which only stout
-frames and sturdy hearts could have conquered. On one occasion,
-corporal Owen Lonergan was sent to measure three check lines; it was
-biting cold at the time, and the ground was covered with snow some
-two or three feet deep. Though encumbered with an instrument, a
-greatcoat, and heavy clothes, he entered with spirit upon his work
-and rapidly completed two of the checks, but on commencing the third
-he was obliged to relinquish it, as his hands, painfully benumbed,
-had lost their power. The snow by this time was very high, and it
-was only by superhuman effort, sustained for several hours, that he
-succeeded in mastering the difficulties of his situation, and
-regaining his hut before nightfall.
-
------
-
-Footnote 479:
-
- Ibid., i., p. 114.
-
------
-
-The survey of the sixty-four mile line was important because of the
-necessity imposed by the treaty of making it rigidly strait. A force
-of labourers, guided in the duty by the most intelligent men with
-the commission, first struck out the line as indicated by
-astronomical observation. When this preliminary trace was effected,
-other labourers, in strong batches, “directed by non-commissioned
-officers of the sappers and miners were sent to cut the whole line
-thirty feet wide, clearing a way in the centre, of about eight feet
-wide, but leaving the other part with the stumps breast high and the
-trees as they had fallen. These parties were guided in their
-cuttings by the marks which had been set up on the ridges at no very
-great distances apart from each other. When the line had been thus
-cut out from end to end, a transit instrument was sent through it,
-adjusting correctly all the station poles, and insuring the
-straightness of the line beyond all doubt.”[480]
-
------
-
-Footnote 480:
-
- ‘Corps Papers,’ i., p. 124.
-
------
-
-At the termination of the survey, Lieutenant-Colonel Estcourt thus
-wrote of the conduct and services of the detachment: “I beg to
-acknowledge the valuable assistance they have rendered. The
-character of the duties intrusted to them has been such as must have
-been given to an officer had they not been attached to the
-commission, entailing thereby a great additional expense, not only
-on the score of wages, but also of equipment and assistance; and I
-doubt whether the work would have been better executed. All that was
-expected, therefore, from their employment has been fully realized;
-their efficiency in the field, and their general good conduct and
-respectability, have been very creditable to them and to their
-corps. Those who are now about to leave us, and have been at
-Washington during all our residence here, deserve the highest
-commendation for their uniform good conduct. In no single instance
-has there been the least occasion for complaint or even remark.” In
-his orders to the detachment at parting, he reiterated the substance
-of the above tribute, and spoke of the unmixed satisfaction he would
-look back upon the whole of his intercourse with the sappers. The
-survey pay of the men, in addition to their regimental pay, ranged
-between 2_s._ 10_d._ and 3_s._ 9_d._ a-day, and free rations and
-hotel expenses were also allowed them.[481]
-
------
-
-Footnote 481:
-
- The senior non-commissioned officer, sergeant James Mulligan, was
- much noticed for his attainments and exertions. His duties with
- the commission were of a nature to require the exercise of
- patience and resolution, and demanded always a scrupulous,
- unremitting attention. In this he was never found to fail, but
- rendered valuable services, “which,” adds Colonel Estcourt, “few
- civilians could have undertaken, or, if capable, would not have
- undertaken, but for the highest salary.” Mulligan’s survey-pay was
- 3_s._ 9_d._ a-day. After his discharge, in September, 1846, he was
- awarded, for his high merit, a silver medal, and a special
- gratuity of 25_l._ On leaving the corps he retired, with ample
- pecuniary means, to Ireland.
-
------
-
-The war in Kaffirland again broke out this year and afforded ample
-employment for the two companies of the corps, which were scattered
-in sections to the several posts on the frontier. A small detachment
-of sappers appears to have been the first troops to meet with
-hostile interruption in the prosecution of its duties, and the
-circumstance is quaintly alluded to in the following free metrical
-effusion of a facetious alarmist:—
-
- “There was a stir in Kaffirland one morning,
- A chief with Government some ground disputed;
- And then he very fairly sent us warning
- Our plans and his were totally unsuited:
- So Colonel Hare, as did of old, Mahomet,
- Call’d for his boots, and flar’d up like a comet.
-
- “Meanwhile Sandeli, who’s a lad of metal,
- Swore that the sappers should not light a fire
- To cook their dinners or to boil their kettle;
- And so—denouncing on them vengeance dire,—
- He bid them pack their tools and strike their tents,
- And made believe to seize their instruments.”[482]
-
------
-
-Footnote 482:
-
- “The Alarm,” in ‘United Service Magazine,’ 1846, ii., p. 383.
-
------
-
-The nature of the service upon which the companies were employed
-precluded them from taking any very active or prominent share in the
-operations of the campaign, or of their numbers being collected in
-any force to render their movements impressive and conspicuous;
-nevertheless, as opportunities offered of withdrawing them from
-their more pacific duties, they were made to participate with the
-other troops in the harassing war which, without intermission,
-continued with vigour until the winter.
-
-Corporal Benjamin Castledine, ordered to proceed from Fort Beaufort
-to Post Victoria, started on the 21st March, 1846, with a gunner of
-the royal artillery who was armed with a sword only, in charge of a
-waggon with twelve oxen and two natives—a driver and a leader—who
-had one musket between them. In crossing a drift, after marching
-seven miles, the oxen were knocked up, and the corporal sent the
-driver back for more cattle. At night the corporal took turn as
-sentry with the artilleryman. Next morning at daylight, the leader
-was ordered to collect the cattle then grazing about three hundred
-yards off; but while away, shots were heard in the direction he had
-taken. The corporal, leaving the waggon in charge of the
-artilleryman, ran to the banks of the drift, and before he had time
-to seek cover in the bush, was met by a volley from several armed
-Kaffirs, who had already wounded the leader and taken his gun. The
-corporal stood his ground, and wounding two of their number by his
-correct firing, the rest carried off the injured men and drove away
-the corporal’s cattle. Luckily, soon afterwards, a patrol of one
-sergeant and seven men of the 7th dragoon guards came up, and
-hearing what had happened, they pursued the Kaffirs and retook the
-oxen. The corporal with his escort and cattle, except two of the
-latter, which were lost on the road from exhaustion, resumed the
-route and reached Post Victoria on the 22nd March. Colonel Somerset,
-then commanding the frontier, hearing through Lieutenant Stokes,
-R.E., of the affair, gave corporal Castledine much credit for his
-conduct. This was the first skirmish in the war.
-
-From the 16th to 18th April three men served with a demibattery of
-artillery as gunners, during Colonel Somerset’s operations in the
-Amatola mountains, and retreat from Burn’s hill to Block drift,
-where they were present in a smart action.
-
-Ten men took part with the artillery at the guns, from 20th April to
-29th September, at Victoria, Fort Beaufort, and Block drift. At
-these forts and at Graham’s Town the men for weeks together lay down
-in their clothes and accoutrements ready to meet any sudden attack.
-At Beaufort, four guns were manned by them, two 9-pounders and two
-5½-inch howitzers: one of these had horses attached, which were
-mounted by the sappers.
-
-Graham’s Town, denuded of its garrison to scour the Amatolas, was
-left unprotected. Bodies of Kaffirs pressed into the colony, marking
-their track by murder and desolation. Tidings of their savage
-proceedings being brought in by mounted burghers, breathless with
-the intelligence, it was feared the town would be early attacked. At
-once the engineer at the station set to work to fortify it, and with
-the assistance of some Fingoes and Hottentots, the few sappers that
-remained rapidly blockaded the streets and avenues leading into the
-town. The return, however, of Colonel Somerset’s division checked
-the enemy’s advance on this, the metropolis of the frontier.[483]
-
------
-
-Footnote 483:
-
- ‘United Service Journal,’ iii., 1846, p. 328.
-
------
-
-On the 23rd April, under Lieutenant Bourchier, R.E., fifty-one
-non-commissioned officers and men repulsed an attack by the enemy on
-the Farmer’s camp near Fort Brown. The action lasted about four
-hours, and though the night was extremely dark, the sappers, serving
-both as infantry and artillery in charge of two field-pieces, beat
-off the enemy with the loss, as was afterwards acknowledged by the
-chief _Stock_, of thirty killed. The sappers _only_ were engaged in
-this affair, and their spirited and gallant conduct was reported by
-Lieutenant Bourchier.
-
-On the 17th and 31st May and 1st and 18th June, about forty
-non-commissioned officers and men, sent from Fort Brown under
-Lieutenant Bourchier, went in pursuit of marauding parties of the
-enemy. From Double drift under the same officer, four other parties
-were despatched through the bush after the Kaffirs on the 25th June,
-7th July, and 7th and 18th August. Sergeant Thomas P. Cook and
-corporal John Campbell were reported to have shown great
-determination and intelligence in following the enemy in their
-fastnesses. The former accompanied six of the patrols and the latter
-seven. Near Fort Brown, three Kaffir spies, discovered creeping up
-to the place to reconnoitre, were shot; two of these were brought
-down by privates Alexander Irvine and John Patterson.
-
-From 3rd June to 13th July, ten men with a company of the 90th
-regiment, fifty marines and some sailors, under Lieutenant Owen,
-R.E., constructed a flying bridge of boats, &c. for crossing the
-Fish river mouth, and threw up a field-work on the right bank. In
-this service private John Vance, a superior carpenter, “showed
-remarkable zeal, skill, and intelligence.” The work was undertaken
-to establish an open line of communication to Fort Peddie.[484]
-
-Footnote 484:
-
- Vance is noticed in Colonel Pasley’s 'Practical Operations for a
- Siege’ for his assistance in executing some of the wood engravings
- to the work. He was an excellent carpenter and modeller, but his
- efforts at engraving show but little refinement. Untaught in the
- art, his attempts to supply the place of competent practitioners
- can only be regarded as the neat and more advanced stages of
- carpentering. Pity, however, that such a man, so apt, so
- ready—should have been enslaved by his vices. A drunkard, in the
- most degraded sense of the word, no one regretted, when his
- service expired, to see him quit the corps.
-
-Under Lieutenant Stokes, R.E., twelve men shared in the operations
-with the second division in the field and at the passage at the
-mouth of the Keiskama river from the 6th to 16th July. From the
-latter date to the 13th September, under the same officer, six other
-privates served with the second division during Sir Peregrine
-Maitland’s attack upon the Amatola mountains, and constructed a
-field-work for the protection of the camp at Perie.
-
-On the 15th and 16th July, sixteen non-commissioned officers and men
-under Lieutenant Bourchier were present in action with the enemy at
-Dodo’s kraal, under the command of Captain Hogg, 7th dragoon guards.
-
-From the 16th July to 13th September, twelve men constructed a
-field-work for the protection of the camp at Waterloo Bay under
-Lieutenant Owen, R.E.
-
-From 20th July to 12th September, thirty-eight non-commissioned
-officers and men served in the field with the first division during
-Sir Peregrine Maitland’s attack on the Amatola mountains; and under
-the direction of Captain Howorth, R.E., restored Fort Cox. On the
-29th July the camp on the Amatola flats was attacked by the enemy,
-and sergeant Joseph Barns of the corps was killed.
-
-Seven men under Lieutenant Bourchier were present, from the 25th to
-30th August, with Colonel Somerset’s patrol between the Fish river
-and the Keiskama.
-
-On 24th October, the Swellandam native infantry at Fort Beaufort,
-directed to escort waggons to Waterloo Bay, marched from the
-parade, contrary to the remonstrances of their officers towards
-Graham’s Town. There were about 350 of the levy present, and the
-simultaneous and unhesitating movement of the mutineers, gave
-reason to fear that the conspiracy was well organized. Captain
-Ward, of the 91st regiment, the commandant, at once ordered the
-two artillerymen and five sappers under corporal Edward Barnecoat
-to follow in pursuit with the three-pounder howitzer. This was all
-the commandant’s force. The gun was up in a few minutes, and
-bounding down the street, reached the bridge, where halting, the
-captain ordered the howitzer to be put in action. With only eight
-men Captain Ward thought it imprudent to proceed further. Trying
-the effect of firing three rounds of blank ammunition, the
-mutineers pushed up the acclivity with increased speed at every
-discharge, and reforming on its brow, seemed disposed to hazard a
-fight. At this moment a detachment of the 90th regiment—which
-happened to be at the fort on escort duty—pressed up to the
-bridge. Immediately the gun was limbered up and when the little
-column was about to scale the height, Colonel Richardson, who had
-now arrived, countermanded the order to advance. With only a
-handful of men, there was but a remote chance of success against
-350 exasperated rebels all armed and posted on commanding ground;
-and so swayed by merciful considerations the colonel employed two
-missionaries to parley with the misguided men, who, soon, in great
-part, returned to their allegiance.[485]
-
------
-
-Footnote 485:
-
- Mrs. Ward’s ‘Cape and the Kaffirs,’ Bohn’s edit., 1851, pp.
- 145-147.
-
------
-
-These comprise the active services of the companies during the year,
-in which, though the parties do not appear to have gained any
-mention in dispatches or reports for their conduct and efficiency,
-they always behaved like good soldiers, and spared no exertion to
-accomplish the objects for which they were employed. They were
-likewise much harassed on varied escort duty, such as conveying from
-fort to fort waggons with ammunition, provisions, and wounded men,
-and took part in all those multifarious services, carried on at
-twenty different frontier posts and forts, which the character of
-that desultory and peculiar warfare continually exacted.
-
-In April, the small blocked epaulettes were superseded by others
-with loose twisted cords of three inches long suspended from a
-raised corded crescent. Those for the sergeants and staff-sergeants
-were of the artillery pattern—long loose gold fringe and gilt
-crescent to correspond with the privates' epaulettes. The
-shoulder-strap for the sergeants and other ranks was of blue cloth
-faced with gold lace. The staff-sergeants' epaulettes continued
-boxed as before, with a full laced gold strap edged with raised
-embroidered wire, and a gilt crescent, but the bullion was longer
-than formerly. The collar of the coatee for all ranks, which had a
-triangular-shaped piece of scarlet cloth at the back, was this year
-entirely of blue cloth, but laced as before, with rectangular loops.
-The alteration was made to give, in appearance, breadth and
-squareness to the men’s shoulders.
-
-Corporal John Rae, second-corporal John Mealey and eighteen men,
-were employed from the 8th June to the 17th August, in executing
-some underground works for the drainage of Windsor. These consisted
-of a tunnel or cutting from the entrance of the long walk to the
-north side of the quadrangle of the castle, and also the excavation
-of a driftway under the north front, moving east and west. The
-tunnel was approached from several circular shafts 4 feet 6 inches
-in diameter, of an average depth of about 25 feet; and the
-gallery—the height of which was six feet, and width 4 feet 6
-inches—was driven between 750 and 800 feet through chalk, flint,
-made earth, old moats, and crumbling vaults and foundations; and,
-notwithstanding the difficulties of the work, was prosecuted with
-such exactness, that the line of driving between the shafts, was
-rarely more than an inch or two out of its true level. Indeed, it
-was remarked that the tunnel, commenced at opposite sides of the
-castle, was so correct in its progress, that on reaching the centre,
-there did not exist two inches of difference where the tunnels
-merged into one.[486] In hazardous earth, mining frames and sheeting
-were resorted to, but even these expedients, at times, did not
-prevent the earth from falling and impeding the workmen. Thirty
-civil labourers worked the windlasses and drove the barrows for the
-party. All hands worked from five in the morning until half-past six
-in the evening, and made by their exertions, seven days and a half
-a-week, at 1_s._ 6_d._ each a-day. Captain Vetch, late of the corps,
-was the engineer for the work, and Lieutenant the Honourable H. F.
-Keane, commanded the detachment. The Board of Woods and Forests paid
-the expenses of the undertaking, and praised the skill and energy
-with which the excavations had been conducted and completed. The
-Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Treasury also acknowledged the
-great advantage which resulted from the employment of the sappers on
-the occasion.
-
------
-
-Footnote 486:
-
- The ‘Times,’ August 19, 1846.
-
------
-
-Sergeant Philip Clark and eleven rank and file embarked at Deptford,
-in the ‘Blenheim,’ on the 3rd of June, 1846, for the territories of
-the Hudson’s Bay Company. A detachment of artillery, and three
-companies of the 6th foot, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel
-Crofton, were also with the expedition. The employment of this small
-force on the Red River was occasioned by the menacing hauteur of the
-Americans respecting the Oregon territory, which at this period was
-a momentous question between the two countries; but fortunately, the
-dispute terminated in a treaty which settled amicably the national
-differences.
-
-The party was composed of excellent mechanics and well-conducted
-men, two of whom were also good surveyors and draughtsmen. Three
-chronometers and barometers, with measuring chains and surveying
-instruments, were placed in charge of sergeant Clark. Captain H. C.
-B. Moody, R.E., took command of the party on its landing at York
-Factory on the 14th of August, and subsequently, for about a year,
-the command was held by Captain Beatty, R.E.
-
-It was not intended to attach the sappers to the divisions of the
-troops in pushing up the country, but to employ them on services for
-which they were more peculiarly adapted, such as measuring the
-heights of the several falls in the course of the rivers that
-occasion the necessity for the portages, and improving the latter
-whenever any short proceeding would give them facilities for doing
-it: also cutting, on prominent objects, bench marks to show the
-height of the water for the information of travellers, and embodying
-in memoranda a description of the nature of the ground traversed and
-the features of the country, with suggestions for improving the
-passage. Owing, however, to the scarcity of officers, the colonel in
-command could not permit the employment of the detachment in this
-manner. Accordingly, eight men accompanied the first division of the
-force, two the second, and two, with Captain Moody, the third. The
-first party took the barometers; and the chronometers were taken by
-the two surveyors in the 3rd brigade. In concert with the troops,
-they tracked, hauled, rowed, and poled the boats the whole way to
-Fort Garry; and, notwithstanding the intensity of the cold, such was
-the nature of the duty, it required them in its execution, to go
-barefooted with their trousers tied above the knee. At night, for a
-few hours only, they slept under canvas frequently in wet clothes,
-upon the damp snow-covered ground. The distance traversed was about
-400 miles, through swamps and rapids, over rocky islets, and up and
-down steep and slippery banks and declivities; and the operation,
-one of immense difficulty and peril, was not achieved without much
-labour and discomfort.
-
-At each portage, sergeant Clark himself carried the chronometers,
-and, after examining them, placed a sentry to watch them. He also
-measured the heights of the falls and took the difference of the
-levels. In shoal water, or in running the several rapids, the
-delicate instruments were invariably removed from the boats to save
-them from shocks by bumping against hidden rocks and impediments.
-The chronometers were wound up every morning at nine o’clock, and
-the results and comparative differences registered. Three times a
-day the indications of the barometers, the changes in the
-atmosphere, and the force and direction of the wind were registered,
-and these observations were recorded until the expedition quitted
-the settlement.
-
-Sergeant Clark and private Robert Penton showed great zeal and
-intelligence in the manner they carried out their scientific duties
-on the route, and corporal Thomas R. Macpherson, who had charge of
-the party that accompanied the first brigade from York Factory, was
-commended for the notes he took of the route, and for the report he
-framed thereon.
-
-At Lower Fort Garry, the troops, under the officers of engineers,
-with the sappers as overseers, made a trench round the fortress, and
-cleared away the wood contiguous to it for 300 yards in every
-direction. A varying party was detached with corporal Macpherson to
-Upper Fort Garry; and at both places, the sappers carried out all
-those services which the nature of the settlement and the weather
-made indispensable for the health and accommodation of the troops.
-While at work the detachment wore leather jackets and trousers.
-
-In the second year of the station, corporal Macpherson with one
-sapper was sent to York Factory, and returned in charge of the
-magnetic and other instruments left there the year before. Although
-the intricacies of the passage were considerable, increased by the
-necessity of personally carrying the cases over the portages, he
-safely conveyed them to the fort without detriment or derangement.
-Some of the party were employed at intervals, in the survey of
-portions of the Assimboine, Saskatchewan and Red Rivers, and
-corporal Macpherson[487] and second-corporal Penton, under Captain
-Moody, examined and explored the country in the vicinity of the
-boundary line of the United States at Pambina.
-
------
-
-Footnote 487:
-
- In the life of some men there happen singular incidents, which
- give either a romantic or a strangely-degraded cast to their
- career. In this category corporal Macpherson may be fairly
- included. He was a very talented and superior artificer, and his
- general knowledge and experience made his services conspicuous. At
- Hythe he absented himself, and leaving his clothes on the bank of
- the canal, a belief prevailed that he was drowned; he, however,
- turned up about a year afterwards, and was convicted of the crime
- of desertion. But soon gaining favour by his diligence and
- talents, he rose rapidly to the rank of sergeant, and was
- entrusted with responsible duties at Gibraltar, Hudson’s Bay, and
- finally in Nova Scotia. At Halifax he again deserted, with 206_l._
- of the public money, but a vigilant piquet being on his trail, he
- was apprehended at Annapolis, fortunately for the captain of his
- company, with the whole of the treasure in his pocket. Being tried
- and convicted he was sentenced to fourteen years' transportation.
- A review of his useful services, and the humane intercession of
- Colonel Savage, R.E., his commanding officer, obtained for him a
- full pardon—only to be followed by the basest ingratitude and
- crime. A few months elapsed, and the forgiven felon _a third time_
- deserted. On the passage to the States he robbed a gentleman with
- whom he got into conversation, but as the theft was discovered
- before the debarkation took place, the gentleman repossessed his
- money, and a gold watch supposed to be stolen. On landing, the
- gentleman took steps for the apprehension of the delinquent, but,
- by artful remonstrances, he made the public believe that the
- reason of his arrest was not for theft as alleged, but for
- desertion from the British service. At once the mob sympathized
- with his fate, rescued him from custody, and he is now at large in
- the States. The gold watch, brought to Halifax by the gentleman,
- proved to be the property of a comrade.
-
------
-
-On the 3rd of August, 1848, the sappers quitted Fort Garry under
-the command of Captain Blackwood Price, R.A.—Captain Moody having
-then returned to Canada—and after completing the arduous and
-fatiguing descent to York Factory, they embarked there on the 24th
-of August, and landed at Woolwich, 18th of October, 1848. Both
-Lieutenant-Colonel Crofton, and Major Griffiths, his successor in
-command, awarded an honourable meed of approbation to the
-detachment for its exemplary conduct and services; but sergeant
-Clark was particularly noticed by the former for his attainments
-and ready zeal. “His exertions,” adds the Colonel, “were never
-wanting, even in matters not in immediate connexion with the
-corps, and to him I owe the good arrangements made for the
-garrison library, in aid of which, his services as librarian were
-cheerfully given without gratuity.”[488] Sergeant Clark, corporal
-Macpherson and second-corporal Penton,[489] received promotion for
-their useful exertions on this expedition.
-
------
-
-Footnote 488:
-
- Sergeant Clark was brought up in the royal military asylum. He was
- for some years on the survey of Ireland, and by subsequent
- application, became a fair surveyor and draughtsman. He served a
- station at Corfu before going to Hudson’s Bay, and subsequently
- passed a few years as colour-sergeant of the 20th company, at
- Freemantle, Western Australia.
-
-Footnote 489:
-
- An enterprising and superior surveyor. He was importantly employed
- in 1843 in the determination of the longitude of Valentia, and is
- now a sergeant at Halifax, Nova Scotia, whither he had been sent
- to superintend the laying of asphalte.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1846.
-
-Exploration survey for a railway in North America—Services of the
- party employed on it—Personal services of sergeant A.
- Calder—Augmentation to the corps—Reinforcement to China—Recall of
- a company from Bermuda—Royal presents to the reading-room at
- Southampton—Inspection at Gibraltar by Sir Robert Wilson—Third
- company placed at the disposal of the Board of Works in
- Ireland—Sergeant J. Baston—Services of the company—Distinguished
- from the works controlled by the civilians—Gallantry of private G.
- Windsor—Coolness of private E. West—Intrepid and useful services
- of private William Baker—Survey of Southampton, and its
- incomparable map.
-
-
-Sergeant Alexander Calder and seven rank and file of the survey
-companies embarked at Liverpool in the ‘Britannia’ steam-ship, and
-landed at Halifax, 2nd July. Subsequently, the party was increased
-by the arrival of four rank and file who had been employed on the
-boundary survey in the state of Maine. This detachment, with two
-pensioner non-commissioned officers of the corps, served under the
-direction of Captain Pipon,[490] and afterwards of Lieutenant E. Y.
-W. Henderson and Major Robinson, R.E., in surveying the country
-between Quebec and Halifax, to ascertain the best route for a
-railway to connect the provinces. The party was dressed in plain
-clothes, and for the service of the woods, fur caps, pea-coats, and
-over-boots were added.
-
------
-
-Footnote 490:
-
- Accidentally drowned in the Restigouche, 28th October, 1846. His
- body was identified by private John Ashplant, and taken charge of
- by him and sergeant Calder until its removal from Campbelltown to
- Fredericton, where it was interred in the public cemetery.
-
------
-
-Five different routes, the projects of rival interests, were
-surveyed, and the neighbouring forests and wilds, abounding with
-wood and water, explored. The forests were in their primeval
-state—dense and rugged. Pine trees were the chief growth, and the
-ground, encumbered with sharp-pointed branches thrown down by time
-or the violence of winds, formed a regular abattis, and with a thick
-undergrowth of shrubs and bushes rendered the woods almost
-impervious. Parties exploring, as soon as they left the rivers or
-beaten tracks, had to cut their way before them. The difficulties of
-carrying out the service were considerable. The hills being as much
-covered with the forest as the plains and valleys, views of the
-surrounding country could not easily be obtained. Generally this
-object was effected by climbing, in which some of the sappers became
-very expert, “and, assisted by creepers—a contrivance of iron spikes
-buckled to the feet—could climb well.”[491] To wander in the least
-degree from the path cut or marked was dangerous, as the chances of
-being benighted or lost in the prairie were very great.[492]
-
------
-
-Footnote 491:
-
- ‘Professional Papers,’ N. S., ii., p. 36.
-
-Footnote 492:
-
- Ibid., p. 38.
-
------
-
-The detachment was divided into parties of two each as
-assistant-surveyors, with ten or twelve labourers, under a civil
-surveyor of the country. “Each party had a particular line to
-explore. The sappers carried either two or three barometers and
-detached thermometers with them; also a 5-inch theodolite, a
-measuring chain, pocket compasses, &c. As the lines were cut out by
-the axemen and labourers, the sappers measured them, and took the
-angles for direction, and also for elevation or depression. The
-barometers were registered at the summits of ridges and bottoms of
-valleys. Somewhere, at the most convenient spot, in the
-neighbourhood of the exploring parties, a sapper was stationed with
-a standard barometer, who did not move from his post until ordered
-to do so. His duty was to register his barometer and thermometers
-every hour during the day.”[493]
-
------
-
-Footnote 493:
-
- Ibid., p. 37.
-
------
-
-The result of the surveys and investigations was an able report from
-Major Robinson, describing a range of country through which a
-railway could beneficially pass, extending in length to 635 miles,
-from Halifax to Quebec. The proposed route was determined with
-reference to the resources of the tract to be traversed, its
-accessibility, and facility of adaptation to the purpose, as well as
-its military and general advantages.
-
-After completing the plans and sections of the lines explored, the
-party, in September, 1848, returned to England and rejoined the
-survey department.
-
-The personal services of sergeant Calder on this duty are
-sufficiently interesting to receive notice in this place; and, with
-some little difference in points of duty and incident, may be taken
-as an average type of the individual adventures of the rest of the
-party. From Halifax to Folly Village, he surveyed a line of
-seventy-five miles with the barometer, and from thence, for
-twenty-five miles, measured the roads from the high-water mark of
-the Bay of Fundy, by taking the heights with the theodolite, using
-the angle of elevation and depression, and checking the same
-simultaneously, by barometrical observation. He afterwards traversed
-a varied country for about sixty miles to Amherst, from whence he
-carried on the survey, barometrically, to Mirimichi. The completion
-of another rough road of ten miles now took him fully into the
-wilderness, where he continued his work till the winter set in.
-During his labours in the woods he ran short of provisions. He was
-then in charge of twelve men, carrying with them 3 lbs. of pork, 1
-lb. of oatmeal, and a small bag of ginger. Upon this scanty fare the
-party subsisted for three days; and, harassed as they were by hard
-travelling through a mountainous country, entangled with a tissue of
-bush and branches covered with deep snow, their fatigues and
-privations were considerably increased. Heavy loads also they
-carried, and so closely were the trees packed together, in the
-exuberant vegetation of the forest, that the adventurers not only
-had to tear themselves through the thicket, but were continually
-impeded by logs of fallen trees and tufts of stubborn underwood. On
-the evening of the third day the hunger of the men began to show its
-effects in emaciation and despondency. At this moment sergeant
-Calder found it necessary to relieve the party of the stores and
-abandon them in the woods. The theodolite and barometers he attached
-in a safe position to a tree. He then directed the men to use their
-utmost exertions in tracking a spot where provisions could be found.
-Scrambling down the banks of a large river they hurried onwards some
-six miles, when a newly-blazed tree was discovered, indicating the
-proximity of a lumbering camp. The blazed marks were followed
-further on for about five miles, and then, to the unbounded joy of
-the party, a light seen through the chinks of a log-hut on the
-opposite shore drew the men in the dark on a fallen tree across the
-stream to the desired camp, where their wants were appeased and
-their exhausted strength restored. Sergeant Calder acted with
-coolness and kindness throughout, and maintained the strictest
-discipline and order. He afterwards recovered the instruments and
-stores left in the woods, which his men, from weakness and want, had
-been unable to carry.
-
-In the second season the sergeant returned to the Cobiquid
-Mountains, the scene of his former exertions. This range was the
-vertebræ of the country, and the hinging point of an important tract
-in the route of the proposed railway. Some doubts were entertained
-as to the practicability of accurately ascertaining the gradients of
-this dangerous and unknown district, and had they not been
-determined, the scheme must have proved abortive; but sergeant
-Calder undertook the service, and accomplished it by means of rods
-and the spirit-level, to the entire satisfaction of his officers,
-verifying at the same time the correctness of his former
-investigations in connexion with the survey of the hills. After
-this, travelling 200 miles to Cape Canso, he surveyed a branch line
-along a rugged coast and through an intricate wilderness, to within
-a few miles of Pictou. In conducting this work one of his labourers
-was seized with fever. Calder took especial care of the man’s
-comforts, which, however, from the necessity of crossing rivers and
-lakes of great breadth on catamarans, or rafts of logs, were
-unavoidably much restricted. As he proceeded, the trials of the
-sergeant and his men multiplied, both from the fatigue of travelling
-and the want of provisions. Wild berries were eaten to supply the
-cravings of hunger; but to assuage the more fastidious necessities
-of the sick man, the berries were taken by him with a little sugar.
-What was most distressing at this time was the absence of all
-shelter from the inclement weather, and both hale and sick were
-therefore forced to stretch their limbs under the snow-laden boughs
-of some dwarf trees, exposed to the keenness of the night frost. At
-last the party arrived at a district known as the “Garden of
-Paradise”—a rugged and inhospitable region, where the men were
-benevolently entertained by some wild Highland settlers. Soon
-afterwards the sergeant journeyed to Halifax, where he completed the
-plans and sections of his surveys, and returned to England after a
-service with the exploration expedition of two years and three
-months.[494]
-
------
-
-Footnote 494:
-
- This non-commissioned officer acquired, in his early service, a
- sound knowledge of surveying in all its branches. For more than
- eighteen years he had charge of large parties of surveyors and
- draughtsmen, and his systematic habits and intelligence rendered
- his assistance of great advantage. Well adapted for carrying out
- any arrangement connected with the survey, and for conducting the
- beneficial employment of large parties over extensive districts,
- he was, in 1846, selected for the exploration duty above referred
- to; and his report on a portion of the line, which embraced the
- intricate parts of the Cobiquid Mountains, was considered of
- sufficient interest to receive a place in the ‘Parliamentary Blue
- Book,’ on the subject of that railway. In April, 1853, he was
- pensioned at 1_s._ 11_d._ a-day, and, on quitting the corps, bent
- his course westward and settled in Canada.
-
------
-
-A large increase to the army and artillery led to a proportionate
-increase to the royal sappers and miners. This was suggested by Sir
-John Burgoyne, the inspector-general of fortifications, to maintain
-a sufficient disposable force for employment in any military
-services rendered necessary by the exigencies of the times. Eight
-companies were ordered to be added to the corps, but their formation
-was spread over three or four years. The first addition gave, on the
-1st April, 1846, 1 sergeant, 1 corporal, 1 second-corporal, and 8
-privates to each of the 10 service companies; and a company numbered
-the 12th, of 100 non-commissioned officers and men, was formed at
-the same time. The corps was thus raised in establishment from 1,290
-to 1,500, and on the 1st September it was further increased to
-1,600, by the formation of the 15th company. The Corfu company
-remained at its original establishment of 62 sergeants and rank and
-file.
-
-On the 22nd July, eighteen rank and file embarked for China, and
-landed at Hong Kong on the 26th December. This was the third
-reinforcement to that command. When relieved in November, 1852, the
-party had dwindled away to 8 men: 7 had died, 2 deserted, and 1 was
-invalided. The total deaths in the three parties, whose united
-strength was 67, amounted to 27 men.
-
-The abandonment of the execution of some extensive works in Bermuda
-permitted the recall to England of the eighth company, which arrived
-at Woolwich on the 5th August, 1846. The strength of the company on
-landing at Bermuda was seventy-nine of all ranks. Of this number
-eight were invalided, thirty-eight had died, one was drowned, one
-killed, and one transported for desertion. Only thirty-one men,
-therefore, regained our shores.
-
-A reading-room was established for the corps at Southampton in the
-summer, which obtained much attention from distinguished visitors.
-The Marquis of Anglesey—then Master-General—presented an engraving
-of himself to the room, and the Queen also patronized it by
-presenting an engraving of his Royal Highness, Prince Albert.[495]
-In placing the gift in the room, Colonel Colby thus recorded the
-fact in a general order to the companies under his command;—“The
-valuable services of this distinguished corps, having been brought
-under Her Most Gracious Majesty’s notice by the ordnance surveys of
-Great Britain and Ireland, the demarcation of the boundary line
-between the British dominions and those of the United States in
-America, and more especially by the survey of the royal domains at
-Windsor and the duchy of Lancaster, Her Majesty has condescended to
-mark her gracious approval of these services, by ordering the
-presentation of a portrait of the Prince Albert to be placed in the
-reading-room.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 495:
-
- A companion plate to Chalon’s portrait of Her Majesty.
-
------
-
-Twice this year the second and eleventh companies were inspected by
-General Sir Robert Wilson, the Governor of Gibraltar—on the 16th May
-and 17th October. On both occasions they presented a very creditable
-appearance under arms. “The progress of the new work,” observes his
-Excellency, “attests their skill and indefatigable diligence, and
-their merits become the reputation of the service to which they
-belong.”
-
-The third company of three sergeants and forty-five rank and file,
-under Captain Wynne, R.E., received orders at ten o’clock at night
-on the 21st September, and in seven hours after was on route _viâ_
-Liverpool for Dublin, where it arrived on the 24th. Placed at the
-disposal of the Irish Board of Works to oversee the poor during the
-continuance of the famine, which, from the failure of the potato
-crop was now the scourge of Ireland, the company was instantly
-removed in small parties to Limerick, Castlebar, Roscommon,
-Newcastle, Boyle, and Castlerea, retaining at Dublin as storekeeper
-and accountant for the Board sergeant John Baston.[496] From these
-several stations the men were again dispersed over districts of wild
-country, where the poor, clamorous for subsistence and life, were in
-a state of revolt. Numbers of these turbulent but starving people
-were employed on the construction of public roads, &c.; and the
-sappers, appointed their overseers, not only laid out their work,
-but instructed them in its performance. To this general duty several
-of them united the office of steward and inspecting check clerk; and
-besides controlling the check clerks, superintended and examined the
-measurements of tasks, and had a general supervision of all
-arrangements in the field. More than six months they continued on
-this duty, and returned to Woolwich on the 8th April, 1847, with a
-high character.
-
------
-
-Footnote 496:
-
- Had charge of the implement store, at 48, City-quay, which
- embraced the receipts and issues of thousands of wheelbarrows and
- hand-carts, and a great assortment of road and draining tools.
- These sergeant Baston was often employed to purchase, and to
- obtain them he perambulated both town and country. The duties
- entrusted to him were performed with promptitude, accuracy,
- and fidelity. Mr. M‘Mahon, the civil engineer, found him
- an exceedingly useful and zealous assistant. He is now
- colour-sergeant in the corps; is a well-read and talented man, and
- his qualifications as an artificer and overseer have rendered him
- capable of much higher employment. He joined the corps a lad, from
- the royal military asylum, and his acquirements and usefulness
- have entirely arisen from his own application. Besides his home
- services, he has passed with credit about seventeen years at
- Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Corfu.
-
------
-
-The works superintended by them were always distinguished from other
-works by the superior order and discipline which they enforced, not
-unfrequently in circumstances of great personal danger, and during a
-winter of unusual severity. In detecting frauds and correcting
-abuses they were found particularly valuable; and their uniform
-zeal, ability and good conduct, met with the perfect satisfaction of
-the Board of Works and the Lords of the Treasury. Even Daniel
-O’Connell spoke favourably of their employment.[497] The working pay
-of the men while under the relief board ranged between 1_s._ and
-2_s._ 6_d._ a-day.
-
------
-
-Footnote 497:
-
- The ‘Times,’ November 4, 1846.
-
------
-
-While on this novel service, private George Windsor, from the
-upright way in which he performed his duty, made himself obnoxious
-to the peasantry in the lawless district of Croom; and but for the
-gallantry with which he defended himself, would probably have lost
-his life. On the 26th December this private was employed in the
-barony of Cashma on the Pullough line of road, and on passing down
-the line in advance of the check clerk and a number of labourers,
-&c., was met by two persons dressed in women’s clothes, with veils
-hanging from their bonnets covering their faces. One was armed with
-a gun, the other with a pistol. Presenting their pieces, they
-ordered him to kneel, but this the private refused, and though he
-was unarmed, the ruffians at once closed upon him. At this moment
-Windsor seized the person armed with the pistol, (dexterously
-thrusting his finger between the trigger and the guard,) and getting
-hold of his throat with the other hand, they fell together,
-fortunately in such a way that the desperado with the gun could not,
-without injuring his accomplice, shoot the sapper. He, therefore,
-beat Windsor with the butt-end of his piece. Several minutes the
-struggle was maintained strangely enough in the presence of a large
-number of stewards and labourers; and had he met with the slightest
-assistance from any of them, would have captured both the offenders;
-but incredulous as it may appear, it must be added to the disgrace
-of Irishmen that, just as he had overpowered the ruffian with the
-pistol, a man named Joseph Lindsay[498]—brother to the check
-clerk—came forward, and dislodging Windsor’s grasp, aided the
-parties to decamp! For his spirited and manly conduct in the attack,
-private Windsor was promoted to be second-corporal.
-
------
-
-Footnote 498:
-
- Afterwards tried and convicted for the offence at the Limerick
- Spring Assizes, 1847.—‘Saunders’s News-Letter,’ March 9, 1847.
-
------
-
-Private Edward West received three threatening notices through the
-post-office warning him not to appear at work again on pain of
-death, adding that, if he did, he should “drop into a bit of a hole
-already dug for his carcase.” Unmoved by these missives, the private
-was always the first on the line; and when the labourers were
-collected, he told them he had received the notices, and then
-burning them in their presence, observed in a loud voice, “that
-would be the way his intended murderers would be served at another
-time.” Once he was attacked by a party from behind a hedge with
-stones. Struck on the head, he was stunned for a few moments, and
-nearly fell. On recovering, he boldly dashed over the hedge to meet
-his assailants, but the cowards made a precipitate retreat. Thirty
-men suspected of being concerned in the assault were at once
-dismissed from employment.
-
-Six other men were promoted for their coolness, as well as tact and
-fidelity, in carrying on their appointed services. Of these private
-William Baker was perhaps the most conspicuous. A brief detail of
-his services will show the nature of his duties and the difficulties
-he had to contend with. Detached to Shonkeragh, eight Irish miles
-from Roscommon, he was placed over a number of labourers who were in
-the last stage of insubordination. At first they took their own time
-of going to work and quitting it, although the regulations required
-them to be present from 7 A.M. till 5 P.M. To train them to
-punctuality was not an easy matter, but by checking them and
-carrying out a firm discipline he soon gained his point. That there
-should be no excuse for absence, he employed a strong boy to blow a
-tin horn on the top of the highest hill, central among the cabins of
-the workmen, to call them to work, and at its sound the rapid
-gathering of the poor at the rendezvous, on all occasions, showed
-their willingness to be guided by any useful reform.
-
-This command over a half-civilized class of men made his services
-very desirable in irregular districts; and among several places
-where he was beneficially employed was Drumshanaugh—a desolate spot
-where a knot of Molly Maguires held sway, and obtained payment
-without work, by intimidating the civil overseers, who feared the
-consequences of not yielding to their exactions. The farmers' sons
-and others who had plenty of cattle were receiving 4_d._ a day more
-than the people who really did work, and 300_l._ in this way were
-paid for bad labour not worth 50_l._ With these labourers he had a
-trying duty to perform; but, amid threats and insubordination, he
-calmly effected his purpose, and suppressed both the spirit of
-turbulence and the practice of fraud.
-
-The labourers received from 4_d._ to 8_d._ and 9_d._ a day, and the
-rough wall builders 1_s._ 6_d._, in strict proportion to the work
-executed. When task-work was introduced, it was difficult to remove
-the prejudices which set in against the change, and quicken into
-zeal the indolence which followed. To carry out the instructions of
-the Board of Works, private Baker selected some of the mildest men
-of his party to work at easy tasks, by which they earned 11_d._ a
-day—3_d._ more than formerly. At the end of the week the overseer
-made a point of this, and paying his choice men first, made suitable
-remarks as they received their money. Next came the day-men, who
-being checked for wet days and lost time, only averaged about 3_s._
-2_d._ a week. The disparity of the payments had a wonderful effect,
-and ever afterwards the system of task labour was eagerly preferred
-by the peasantry.
-
-Deception, however, soon crept into the tasks, which it required
-some tact and alertness to detect. In excavations, the labourers
-frequently came in contact with stone, and for such quantities as
-they dug out and heaped up, they were paid by the cubic yard; but
-often these heaps were merely superficial. In every such case
-private Baker had the mass pulled down and solidly repiled. Acts of
-repetition were followed by the dismissal of the delinquents,
-despite the danger it involved. When this cheat failed they resorted
-to another, by rolling large stones into the heaps from adjacent
-places; but as these always bore unmistakeable evidence of exposure
-to rain and wear, the private never omitted to reject them from the
-pile.
-
-On several occasions when threatening notices of death were posted
-up prohibiting the civil overseers and check-clerks from returning
-to a particular line, a car was despatched, even at midnight, to
-bring private Baker to the excited district. Next morning, appearing
-at his dangerous post, unarmed, he would pacify or humour the
-desperados into order and tranquillity.
-
-When a pay-clerk was discharged, the regular payments were for a
-time interrupted, and the labourers would clamour for a settlement.
-In Baker’s district there were four lines, three of which were
-superintended by civilians: the labourers on them were about 700.
-These threatened daily to go in a body to Boyle, and, should they
-fail to get their pay, to take the lives of the engineer and his
-clerks, and burn down the town. Baker represented the state of
-affairs to the authorities; and on his own recommendation obtained
-permission from Boyle to give checks for meal upon a tradesman in
-Carrick-on-Shannon. By this means he fed the people, and kept their
-irritation in successful check. These periods of disorder occurred
-two or three times, till pay-clerks were appointed to succeed those
-who were discharged or had resigned. The pay-clerks seldom paid
-without the protection of a sapper, who frequently, in instances of
-dispute, took the bag with its responsibilities and perils, and
-served out the wages himself. So well did private Baker manage the
-matter at a wild place in Cashel, that the labourers stood round
-like soldiers to receive their earnings; and to prevent litigation
-or seizure, the money was handed to the recipients through an
-aperture in the pay-hut.[499]
-
------
-
-Footnote 499:
-
- Baker became a second-corporal, and fell heroically at the first
- storming of the Redan, 18th June, 1855.
-
------
-
-Frauds were very common; and when detected, the offenders were
-dismissed. Several civil overseers were, however, afraid to place
-themselves in opposition to the populace; and a sapper working on
-one line has in such instances been sent to another to perform the
-duty. This, of course, produced much ill-feeling against the
-sappers; but beyond a few threats and an occasional attack, the
-sappers passed from the country without material hurt.
-
-The survey of Southampton was completed late this year for the
-Southampton Improvement Board. A detachment of the corps, directed
-by Captain Yolland, R.E., under the local superintendence of
-sergeant William Campbell, executed the work. The map, on a scale of
-60 inches to a mile, occupies thirty-five large sheets, which have
-been magnificently bound in bureau folio, and placed in the
-municipal archives of the town. Sergeant Campbell attended at a
-meeting of the Commissioners on the 31st March, 1847, and presented
-the map, on the part of the Ordnance to the Corporation. The work is
-one of extreme beauty. A more artistical display of ornamental
-surveying does not exist. The stonework of the pavement, the styles
-of the public buildings, the masonry of the graving-dock, the
-undulation of the silt on the shores, and small streams of water
-running into it from the coast, the gardens of private houses, and
-the trees and shrubberies of the common, are all delineated with a
-minuteness of detail and beauty of colouring unexampled in any town
-map in England. Even the map of Windsor, which obtained the
-approbation of Her Majesty for its accuracy and exquisite finish, is
-much inferior to the map of Southampton. The draughtsmen were
-second-corporals Charles Holland[500] and George Vincent, with
-Patrick Hogan,[500] late royal sappers and miners, and Mr.
-Maclachlan.[501] The Commissioners of the town gave a unanimous vote
-of thanks to Captain Yolland, the sappers, and the assistants for
-the survey and map of the borough, and also expressed “the high
-sense they entertained of the great ability and unrivalled skill
-displayed in the execution of the work.” A committee was formed to
-take steps for rewarding Captain Yolland and sergeant Campbell “with
-an adequate testimonial of the Commissioners' high approbation of
-the work;” but the intended honour, on military grounds, was
-declined.[502]
-
------
-
-Footnote 500:
-
- Each received a case of instruments from Prince Albert for merit
- in the execution of a drawing of Windsor.
-
-Footnote 501:
-
- ‘Hampshire Telegraph,’ January 30th, 1847; ‘Hampshire Advertiser,’
- April 3, 1847.
-
-Footnote 502:
-
- ‘Hampshire Advertiser,’ April 3, 1847.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- 1847.
-
-Detachments in South Australia—Corporal W. Forrest—Augmentation to
- the corps—Destruction of the Bogue and other forts—Services of the
- detachment at Canton—First detachment to New Zealand—Survey of
- Dover and Winchelsea—Also of Pembroke—Flattering allusion to the
- corps—Sir John Richardson’s expedition to the Arctic regions—Cedar
- Lake—Private Geddes’s encounter with the bear—Winter quarters at
- Cumberland House—Roadmaking in Zetland—Active services at the
- Cape—Company to Portsmouth.
-
-
-The detachment in South Australia was in July, 1845, on the
-representation of his Excellency Lieutenant-Governor Grey, ordered
-to be reduced, its employment being considered no longer necessary
-or advantageous to the province. Scarcely had steps been taken to
-effect its disbandment, when Governor Grey, removed to another
-settlement, was succeeded by Colonel Robe, who, taking a different
-view of the services of the party, submitted the desirableness of
-its immediate completion to the authorized establishment. In this
-suggestion Earl Grey concurred, regarding it of the greatest
-importance that the survey department in the province should not be
-permitted to fall into arrear in its work; and under authority,
-dated 22nd October, 1846, a party of seven mechanics, who were also
-surveyors and draughtsmen, sailed for Port Adelaide in February and
-landed there the 30th June.[503]
-
------
-
-Footnote 503:
-
- One of the party discharged under Governor Grey’s order was
- corporal William Forrest. Governor Robe, in a despatch to Earl
- Grey, spoke of his entire approbation of the corporal’s
- conduct, both as a soldier and surveyor. Captain Frome, the
- surveyor-general, attributed the rapid progress of the field
- surveys, and the general correctness of the work, to his
- steady zeal and talent. At first he superintended four or five
- detached survey parties, and laid out and corrected their
- work; but when a sufficient quantity of land had been divided
- into sections, corporal Forrest was transferred to the
- triangulation of the known portions of the colony, and
- connected all the detached surveys with the trigonometrical
- stations. This service he conducted in a most satisfactory and
- creditable manner. Returning to England, he was discharged in
- April, 1848, and is now living, in ease and comfort, at
- Edinburgh on his pension and his savings.
-
------
-
-The corps was increased by 200 men this year, on account of the
-formation of a company on the 1st April, and another on the 1st
-December. These companies were numbered the seventeenth and
-eighteenth; and the establishment now reached a total of 1,800
-officers and soldiers. When the estimates for the year were under
-consideration in the House of Commons, Colonel Anson, the
-surveyor-general of the Ordnance, in claiming an increased amount to
-cover the augmentation, passed a high eulogium on the corps. After
-speaking in flattering terms of the royal engineers, the Colonel
-added, “He might say as much for the sappers and miners. This body
-was composed of most intelligent men, who applied themselves most
-assiduously to the discharge of their duties, and were equal to any
-services which they might be called upon to perform.”[504]
-
------
-
-Footnote 504:
-
- Debates in the ‘Times,’ March 6, 1847
-
------
-
-Thirty-five non-commissioned officers and men accompanied the
-expedition from Hong Kong to Canton, under Captain Durnford and
-Lieutenant Da Costa, R.E., and were present at the capture of the
-Bogue and other forts in the Canton river on the 2nd and 3rd April.
-The forts taken were fourteen in number, and 865 heavy guns were
-rendered useless by spiking, while a number of barbaric weapons were
-captured.[505]
-
------
-
-Footnote 505:
-
- About twenty of these curious arms, all of the spear form, but
- grotesquely varied, are in the model-room of the royal engineer
- establishment at Chatham.
-
------
-
-The sappers were in advance, and opened the gates of the forts for
-the assaults, and afterwards destroyed the magazines and assisted to
-spike the guns. Privates James Cummins and James Smith placed the
-powder-bags on the gates.[506] Corporal Hugh Smith[507] laid the
-trains to two forts, and was favourably mentioned by Major Aldrich,
-R.E., to Sir John Davis, the Governor, and Major-General D’Aguilar.
-Sergeants Joseph Blaik[508] and Benjamin Darley[509] conspicuously
-distinguished themselves: the former blew in the gate of Zigzag
-Fort, and the latter blew up the magazine at Napier’s Fort.
-
------
-
-Footnote 506:
-
- Both died in China; the former on the 15th August, and the latter
- 15th September, 1847.
-
-Footnote 507:
-
- Discharged 8th October, 1850. He was then a sergeant. See _ante_,
- Syria, 1841.
-
-Footnote 508:
-
- Died at Hong-Kong, 15th August, 1848.
-
-Footnote 509:
-
- Now colour-sergeant in the corps stationed at New Zealand.
-
------
-
-At Canton the sappers were employed in barricading streets, making
-scaling-ladders, &c., and pulling down houses, walls, and other
-obstructions required to be removed. “My own observations,” wrote
-Colonel Phillpotts, the commanding royal engineer in China, “of the
-cheerful and ready manner in which they at all times performed their
-various and arduous duties by day, and often by night, demands my
-most marked approbation.” The gallant conduct of sergeant Blaik
-attracted the notice of Major-General D’Aguilar, for which he was
-promoted to the rank of colour-sergeant. The whole detachment
-remained at Canton until the 8th April; but on the troops quitting
-for Hong Kong four of the sappers were left behind, and assisted
-Lieutenant Da Costa, R.E., in making a survey of the European
-factories at that commercial emporium, until the 14th May, 1847,
-when they rejoined the detachment at Victoria.
-
-On the 10th April one sergeant and twelve rank and file embarked at
-Deptford on board the ‘Ramilies,’ and landed at Auckland, New
-Zealand, on the 9th August. This was the first party of the corps
-detached to that remote settlement.
-
-From April to June one sergeant and twelve rank and file from
-Chatham, under Captain McKerlie, R.E., assisted in the survey and
-contouring of Dover, within a range of a thousand yards from the
-fortifications. Early in the previous year five non-commissioned
-officers and men were employed in a military survey of portions of
-Winchelsea.
-
-Pembroke was also surveyed by a party of one sergeant and eight men
-from the survey companies, between April and December, under Captain
-Chaytor, R.E. This survey included the docks, dockyard, and property
-in its immediate vicinity, to enable measures to be taken for
-raising essential defensive works to protect the place. The survey
-was well executed; and private John Wall,[510] who remained at the
-duty until March 1848, executed with neatness and accuracy, the
-required plans.
-
------
-
-Footnote 510:
-
- Discharged October, 1848, and is now employed with advantage as a
- draughtsman on the Ordnance Survey.
-
------
-
-About this period the survey operations of the corps, both in the
-triangulation and the detail duty, were very conspicuous, and drew
-from the greatest of the daily London journals, in a leader, a high
-commendation for its services and trials. The language of the
-article is too forcible and brilliant to justify abridgment, and the
-complimentary passage is therefore given entire.—“An Englishman has
-a constitutional repugnance to the intrusion of soldiers into civil
-duties; he would rather pay them to walk about than to work, and he
-chooses to make a separate and private hiring of his own police.
-Ordinarily, soldiers are unwelcome visitors to him, seldom appearing
-but at the beck of some scared sheriff or meddling mayor, to correct
-his refractory disposition. But there is a corps which is often
-about him, unseen and unsuspected, and which is labouring as hard
-for him in peace as others do in war. If he lives near a cathedral
-city, he may perhaps have occasionally observed a small wooden
-cradle perched on the very summit of the spire or tower, and he may
-have pitied, perhaps, the adventurous mason who had undertaken the
-job. That cradle contained three sappers and miners, stationed there
-for five or six weeks to make surveys, and who only quitted their
-abode for another equally isolated and airy. Within these last five
-years, a handful of these men, with an engineer officer, have been
-frozen upon the peak of a Welsh mountain, on an allowance of
-provisions fit for the sixth month of a siege, and with no more
-possibility of communicating with the scanty natives of the place,
-than if they had been shipwrecked on the Sandwich Islands.”[511]
-
------
-
-Footnote 511:
-
- The ‘Times,’ 8th March, 1847.
-
------
-
-A party of fifteen men, selected from a number of volunteers by
-Sir John Richardson, joined the expedition under his orders to the
-Arctic seas in June. The object of the mission was to search for
-Sir John Franklin and his crews, by tracing the coast between the
-Mackenzie and Coppermine Rivers, and the shores also of Victoria
-and Wollaston lands, lying opposite to Cape Krusenstern. All the
-men were intelligent artizans, accustomed to boat service and
-laborious employment. They were, moreover, strongly built, of good
-physical powers, and, with one exception, bore excellent
-characters. The defaulter was addicted to drinking, but in other
-respects he was a good and active workman. Knowing that there
-would be no means of obtaining intoxicating drinks in Rupert’s
-Land, Sir John Richardson accepted his services, and he turned out
-an invaluable man. Seven of the party were carpenters, joiners,
-and sawyers, one was a miner, one a painter, and six were
-blacksmiths, armourers, and engineers, who were found useful in
-repairing the boats, working up iron, constructing the domicile
-for the winter residence of the expedition, and making the
-furniture required for its few and simple wants.[512] To suit the
-hard climate of the Arctic zone, each man was provided with a
-flannel jacket and trousers, a stout blue Guernsey frock, a
-waterproof overcoat and cap, and a pair of leggings. They also
-wore mocassins and leather coats, when the nature of the season
-and their employment rendered it necessary.[513]
-
------
-
-Footnote 512:
-
- Sir John Richardson’s ‘Journal of a Boat Voyage through Rupert’s
- Land and the Arctic,’ edit. 1851, p. 43.
-
-Footnote 513:
-
- Ibid., p. 44.
-
------
-
-On the 4th June the men were discharged from the corps, and sailed
-on the 15th from the Thames in the ‘Prince of Wales,’ and the
-‘Westminster.’ Delayed much by ice in Hudson’s Straits, they had a
-long passage, and it was not until about the middle of September
-that the stores for the journey were wholly landed.[514] As soon as
-this service was effected, the expedition, with a number of hired
-men, quitted Norway House in five boats, which, from being “often
-stranded and broken in the shallow waters, caused frequent detention
-for repairs.” Overtaken by winter in Cedar Lake, Mr. Bell, who had
-charge of the expedition until Sir John Richardson arrived, made
-this a depôt, where he stored the boats and goods in a suitable
-house constructed by the sappers. Several of the party were left
-here to take care of the _matériel_, and also the women and
-children, who were unequal to a long journey over the snow.
-
------
-
-Footnote 514:
-
- Ibid., pp. 46, 47.
-
------
-
-In October the bulk of the expedition started for Cumberland House,
-and reached it on the eighth day after leaving Cedar Lake. On the
-first day’s journey private Hugh Geddes and a half-caste Indian were
-attacked by a bear on Muddy Lake. The latter fired three times at
-the beast without bringing him down. Neither of them now had any
-ammunition; but Geddes, who was incapable of much exertion from an
-axe wound in the foot, anticipating the peril, forgot his pains and
-felled two young birch trees, one of which he handed to his
-companion: with these formidable defensors both made a desperate
-onslaught on the raging bear, but it was not until after much labour
-and hazard that they succeeded in slaying it. In due time they
-sleighed his huge carcase to the rendezvous at Cedar Lake.
-
-At Cumberland House one of the divisions passed the winter, and was
-kept in constant employment by attending to several seasonable
-occupations, such as cutting firewood, driving sledges with meat or
-fish, and fulfilling a round of services no less laborious than
-necessary. They also established a fishery on the Beaver Lake, two
-days' march north of the depôt.[515]
-
------
-
-Footnote 515:
-
- Sir John Richardson’s ‘Journal of a Boat Voyage through Rupert’s
- Land and the Arctic,’ edit. 1851, p. 47.
-
------
-
-From July to December three rank and file were employed under
-Captain T. Webb, R.E., in surveying and laying out roads in Zetland,
-in connection with the Central Board for the Relief of Destitution
-in the Islands of Scotland. This service was ordered by the Home
-Government, and the party returned to Woolwich when the winter had
-fairly set in. Second-corporal Harnett was well reported of for his
-intelligence and capabilities, and the two privates for their
-industry and exertions.
-
-At the Cape of Good Hope the two companies were distributed to
-fifteen posts and forts on the frontier. On the 2nd May the sapper
-force there was increased to 198 of all ranks by the arrival of
-thirty-five men, under Lieutenant Jesse, R.E. Between the 14th
-September and 23rd December one sergeant and sixteen rank and file
-were in the field, under Captain Walpole, R.E. They had with them an
-assortment of carpenters' and smiths' tools, engineer stores, and a
-quantity of intrenching tools, besides a large five-oared cutter,
-and the materials and gear to form a raft of casks. From the 1st to
-6th December, eleven of these men were actively employed in
-transporting men and provisions to a large portion of the division
-on the left bank of the Kei, under Lieutenant Jervois, R.E., at a
-time when the rise of the river prevented any intercourse by
-waggons. During the six days, the party exerted themselves in a most
-praiseworthy manner, and sergeant Alexander McLeod was particularly
-active and zealous. Between the 21st November and 1st December,
-three sappers, with a party of the line, under Lieutenant Stokes,
-R.E., opened a road for waggons in the Amatola mountains, and
-constructed a temporary bridge across the Keiskama. Before the
-execution of this service provisions were conveyed to the camp in
-the mountains on mules, and hence the transit was slow and
-uncertain.
-
-On the representation of Colonel Lewis, R.E., a company of full
-strength was removed from Chatham to Portsmouth, on the 22nd
-December. Its employment was confined to the erection and repair of
-such works as could not be undertaken by contract, such as
-strengthening the fortifications, repairing gates, laying platforms,
-curbs, &c. It was also considered indispensable to retain a company
-in that command, to execute, in the event of a war suddenly breaking
-out, the numerous wants likely to occur in such an emergency.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX TO VOL. I.
-
-
- Aboukir, 136
- Acre, 364
- Acting adjutants, 297
- Adam, Sub-Lieutenant, 221, 229, 231, 238, 241
- Adamson, Sub-Lieutenant, 216, 219
- Addiscombe, 301
- Addison, sergeant, 267
- Adour, bridge of the, 213–215
- Africa, 267, 285
- Airy, Professor, 391, 425
- Alba, 195
- Albert, Prince, 445, 446, 470
- Alderney, 173
- Aldrich, Lieutenant, 364, 365;
- Major, 442, 480
- Allan, quartermaster, 416
- ——, Walter, 127
- Allen, Francis, quartermaster-sergeant, 290
- Alexander, Andrew, private, 195
- ——, quartermaster, R.H.A., 106
- ——, Emperor of Russia, 221
- Alexandria, 136
- Algiers, 243
- Allowances to officers commanding companies, 43, 66
- America, disputed territory in, 347, 357, 378
- ——, tracing and surveying boundary line in, 415, 448–454
- ——, exploration survey in, for a railway, 465–469
- Anderson, Andrew, 361
- ——, James, private, 373
- Andrews, James, private, 257, 285
- Anglesey, Marquis of, 470
- Anholt, 181
- Aniers, bridge over the Seine at, 238
- Anniversary of siege of Gibraltar, 42
- Antigua, 82, 255, 270
- Antwerp, 218, 221
- Arctic expedition, 481–483
- _Arethusa_, 284
- Argenteuil, bridge over the Seine at, 238
- Arms and accoutrements, 198, 244, 310, 428–430
- Armstrong, Sub-Lieutenant, 231
- Arnold, Lieutenant, 145
- Arthur, Major-General, 324
- Artificers, formation of corps of, 53–55, 58–64
- Artillery, transfers to, 105;
- mutiny in the, 112,
- Ascension, island of, 279, 282
- Ashplant, John, private, 465
- Auger, Richard, 310–321, 328–340
- Augmentations, 6, 8, 17, 88, 45, 157, 182, 265, 266, 267, 271, 273,
- 342, 344, 356, 368, 379, 469, 479
- Australia, 310–321, 328–340, 342, 478
-
- Badajoz, 179, 191–193
- Bagshot camp, 78
- Bailey, bugle-major, 247
- ——, Edward, private, 442
- Bain, corporal, 117
- Baker, William, second-corporal, 473–475
- Ballingall, private, 250
- Baltimore, 223
- Barbadoes, 248, 254, 256, 258, 283, 284, 291
- Barbara and St. Felipe, forts of, 177
- Barber, John, private, 177
- Barlow, Lieutenant, 435
- Barnecoat, Edward, private, 393;
- corporal, 458
- Barns, Joseph, sergeant, 458
- Barrosa, 181
- Barry, Colonel, 441
- Bastard, corporal, 451
- Baston, sergeant, 471
- Bay of Biscay O!, 77
- Bayonne, 215
- Beal, corporal, 279, 282
- Beatty, Captain, 461
- Beauharnois, 325
- Beer, William, corporal, 111
- Bennett, Captain, 157
- ——, quartermaster-sergeant, 257
- Bennie, William, private, 409
- Berbice, 143, 270
- Bergenopzoom, 219
- Bermuda, 196, 199, 254, 255, 256, 271, 291, 379, 426, 434, 440,
- 441, 470
- Berry, William, private, 267
- Berryhead, 105
- Bethell, private, 36
- Biggs, private, 415
- Binney, Lieutenant, 434
- Birch, Captain, 152, 180
- Black, William, sergeant, 299, 300, 301, 364, 365, 367
- Blackadder, corporal, 193
- Bladensburg, 223
- Blaik, Joseph, sergeant, 399, 428, 480
- Blair, corporal, 5
- Blanshard, Captain, 215, 223;
- Major, 266, 289, 303
- Blyth, sergeant, 18
- ——, Sand, submarine demolitions at, 399
- Board of Works, Ireland, 471–476
- Bogue forts, 479
- Bombarde, 103
- Bonavia, Sub-Lieutenant, 155
- Bond, William, private, 193
- Booth, Sub-Lieutenant, 194, 196
- Booth, Ensign, 6
- Boothby, Captain, 170
- Borland, private, 204
- Borthwick, corporal, 182
- Boteler, Captain, 207, 267
- Boundary survey. See “America”
- Bourchier, Lieutenant, 399, 456–458
- Bows, private, 93
- Boyer, fort, 225
- Brabant, private, 351
- Braid, private, 207
- Brand, corporal, 5;
- sergeant, 20, 34;
- Lieutenant, 33–36
- Brandreth, Lieutenant, 270, 279, 282
- Brennan, John, private, 218, 219
- Bridges, Lieutenant, 84;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 141
- ——, sergeant-major, 3, 5
- Brighton, 84
- Bristo, private, 94, 95
- Broughton, Captain, 356, 378, 449
- Brown, Captain, 227
- ——, Daniel, corporal, 149, 275
- ——, George, private, 17, 28
- ——, quartermaster-sergeant, 364, 367
- ——, John, sergeant, 6
- ——, Thomas, sergeant, 254
- ——, widow, Sultana of Morocco, 7
- Browne, sergeant-major, 111, 132
- Browning, private, 393
- Brownrigg, Lieutenant, 117, 118
- Bruges, 117
- Brussels, 230, 234
- Bruyeres, Captain, 105
- Bryce, Captain, 129, 132, 137;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 171
- Buchanan, Captain, 173, 189
- Buenos Ayres, 153, 162
- Bugles adopted, 247
- Bull-fight, 415
- Bunn, private, 214
- Burgess, sergeant, 111
- Burgos, 194
- Burgoyne, Captain, 162, 166;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 194
- Burke, Patrick, private, 192, 195
- Burmester, Lieutenant, 306
- Burrell, William, private, 92
- Burridge, private, 385–387
- By, Lieutenant-Colonel, 285
- Byham, R., secretary to Board of Ordnance, 68
-
- Cadiz, 129–130, 165, 176, 181, 184, 193, 195
- Calder, Sub-Lieutenant, 181, 200, 211, 223, 243
- ——, sergeant, 465–469
- Calshot castle, 104
- Calvi, 93
- Cameron, John, private, 107
- ——, John, sergeant, 181
- ——, John, sergeant, 380
- ——, Roderick, private, 373, 377, 393, 396
- Campbell, David, private, 243
- ——, John, sergeant, 362, 457
- ——, Malcolm, private, 392
- ——, William, sergeant, 476
- Cambo, 206
- Camps, 78, 84
- Canada, 88, 199, 222, 226, 254, 257, 272, 285–287, 324, 401
- Canton, 479, 480
- Cape Breton, 167, 174, 177, 185
- Cape of Good Hope, 153, 167, 174, 185, 254, 259, 272, 291, 293,
- 362, 384–388, 431–433, 444, 454–459, 483
- Carey, James, corporal, 20
- Caribbee islands, 101, 109, 118
- Carlin, sergeant, 379, 380
- Carlisle, Lord, speech against formation of corps, 62
- Carthagena, 195
- Castelcicala, Prince di, 68
- Castledine, corporal, 455
- Catalonia, 200
- Cathcart, Lord, 63
- Catto, sergeant, 132
- Cave at Gibraltar, 51
- Ceuta, 177
- Ceylon, 141, 185
- Chambers, sergeant-major, 20
- Chatham, 65, 73, 132, 157, 184, 248, 254, 255, 256, 283, 289, 291,
- 292, 308, 441
- Chatou, 238
- Chaytor, Captain, 480
- Chelmsford, 121, 149
- Chesney, Colonel, 297
- Chilcot, Captain, 93
- China, 427, 442, 470, 479
- Cholera, 292
- Christie, Sir Archibald, 283
- Clarence, Duke of, 255, 256
- Clark, George, private, 107
- ——, John, private, 92
- ——, Philip, sergeant, 460–464
- Clarke, Samuel, private, 204
- Cleghorn, Alexander, private, 393, 396, 420, 424, 440
- Clinton, Lieutenant-General, 221
- Colby, Major, 257;
- Colonel, 264, 273, 403, 408, 470
- Cole, Lieutenant, 221
- Coles, John, 310–321, 328–340
- Colleton, Sir James, 261, 266, 278
- Collinson, Captain, 427
- Colquhoun, Colonel, R.A., 306, 322
- Colville, Sir Charles, 243
- Comfort, private, 122
- Commissions from the ranks into the Engineers, 35, 85
- Congella, action at, 385
- Connolly, James, private, 145
- Connor, Owen, private, 204, 206
- Contract, works to be executed by, 278
- Cook, Joshua, private, 87
- ——, Thomas P., sergeant, 359, 361, 457
- Coombs, corporal, 239
- Copenhagen, 163
- Corfu, 222, 249, 254, 255, 259, 265, 291
- Cormack, William, private, 204
- Corsica, 93
- Coruña, 168
- Cottey, corporal, 111
- Cottingham, sergeant, 355
- Councill, corporal, 206, 238
- Courtenay, Mr., opposition of, to formation of corps, 63
- Cowan, Adam, private, 119;
- sergeant, 164
- Cowes, 96
- Craig, John, private, 369, 370
- Crawford, William, private, 362
- Creighton, corporal, 220
- Crockett, private, 410
- Crowdy, private, 393, 396
- Crozier, Lieutenant, 101, 102
- Cuidad Rodrigo, 190
- Cummins, James, private, 479
-
- Dacosta, Lieutenant, 479, 480
- D’Aguilar, Major-General, 442
- Daniel, sergeant, 20
- Danish islands, 133, 164, 169, 175
- D’Arcy, Captain, 120, 132;
- Major, 157;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 163, 171
- Darley, Benjamin, sergeant, 480
- Dalhousie, Lord, 275
- Darbyshire, sergeant, 291, 293
- Dashwood, Lieutenant, 297
- Davie, Sub-Lieutenant, 176, 180
- Davis, John, sergeant, 203
- Dawson, Mr. James, 426
- Deane, corporal, 285
- Deary, Noah, 295, 387
- Debbieg, Colonel, 53, 57
- De Butts, Lieutenant, 87
- Delabeche, Sir Henry, 445, 446
- Delacourt, private, 170
- Demerara, 143, 255
- Demolitions, submarine, 325, 348–353, 358–362, 372–378, 392–399,
- 419–424, 435–440, 441
- De Salaberry, Lieutenant, 180
- Desertion, efforts to prevent, 111
- Designation of corps, 3, 189, 197
- Detachments for service, 120, 124
- Develin, corporal, 194
- Dickens, Lieutenant, 50;
- Colonel, 154
- ——, Captain, 206
- Disaffection of corps, 81
- Discipline of corps, 51, 245, 251
- Diving. See “Demolitions”
- Dodds, private, 204
- Donnelly, Henry, corporal, 235
- Doran, private, 193
- Douglas, Archibald, private, 94
- ——, James, private, 117, 175
- corporal, 191
- Doull, Alexander, Mr., 345, 405
- Douro, 201
- Dover, 105, 132, 149, 157, 184, 248, 480
- ——, Round Down Cliff at, 415
- Dowling, William, private, 207
- Down, John, corporal, 322
- Dowse, Lieutenant, 92, 93
- Dress, 47–50, 69–71, 79, 90, 99, 114, 133, 140, 197, 247, 249, 258,
- 262, 263, 279–281, 287, 292, 305, 371, 459
- Drew, Lieutenant, 68
- ——, Major, R.A., 68
- Drummond, William, private, 86
- ——, Captain, 268
- Drums abolished, 247
- Drunkenness, 96
- Dublin, 425, 471
- Duncan, Andrew, private, 359;
- corporal, 408
- Dundas’s drill, 84
- Dunkirk, siege of, 85
- Dunn, James, private, 204
- Dunnett, sergeant, 272, 276, 277
- Duplat, Captain, 303
- Duport, Captain, R.A., 248
- Durant, private, 194
- Durham, Lord, 324
- Durnford, Elias, Colonel, 86, 90, 93
- ——, Lieutenant, 91, 92; Colonel, 276, 278
- ——, E. W., Colonel, 73
- ——, E. W., Lieutenant, 261
- ——, Captain, 479
- Dyson, corporal, 143
-
- Eastbourne, 149, 174, 185
- East India Company, 322, 393, 394, 396, 419, 428, 435–440, 442
- Eaves, Sub-Lieutenant, 132, 166
- Edgar, wreck of, 422, 435
- Edmonds, corporal, 369–371
- Edrington, private, 300, 301
- Egypt, 132, 135–138, 162
- Elba, 94
- Ellis, Mr. George, 329
- Elphinstone, Captain, 165
- Emmett, Captain, 223;
- Major, 242
- Engineer establishment in France and Netherlands, 236, 239
- Enlistment into corps, opposition to, 73
- Entwistle, sergeant, 379
- Epidemics, 109, 146, 199, 255, 279, 426
- Equilateral pontoons, 416
- Erie, fort, 222
- Esla, bridge, 201
- Essequibo, 143
- Estcourt, Colonel, 415, 449, 453
- Establishment for field instruction, Chatham, 188
- Euphrates expedition, 297–301
- Evans, Thomas, corporal, 204
- ——, James, draughtsman, 50
- Evatt, Lieutenant, 93, 104;
- Captain, 154, 157;
- Colonel, 177
- Evelegh, Lieutenant, 4, 6;
- Captain, 44;
- Colonel, 99, 132
- Evelin, John, corporal, 111
- Exmouth, Lord, 19
- Exploration survey for a railway in America, 465–469
- Eyre, Lieutenant, 217
-
- Fairbairn, John, private, 86
- Falconer, Sub-Lieutenant, 185
- Falkland islands, 388–391, 412–415, 434, 446
- Falmouth, 121
- Faris, Lieutenant, 232
- Faro, 222, 228
- Farrington, Colonel, R.A., 112
- Featherstone, Joseph, private, 107
- Featherstonhaugh, Mr., 347, 356, 378
- Fenwick, Captain, 132
- ——, Robert, Captain, 426
- Fevers, 82, 93, 103, 109, 118, 127, 146, 173, 255, 256, 279, 367,
- 426
- Feversham, 258
- Fez, 7
- Finch, Thomas, sergeant, 20
- Fires, 37, 246, 392
- Fisher, Benjamin, corporal, 299, 300, 301
- ——, Lieutenant-Colonel, 132
- Fitzgerald, Lieutenant-Colonel, 275
- Fitzherbert, Mrs., 85
- Flanders, 83, 85, 88, 94, 117
- Flannagan, John, private, 204
- Fleming, William, private, 92
- Fletcher, Lieutenant, 91, 102, 128;
- Captain, 157, 163;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 169
- Flushing, 171
- Forbes, Joseph, sergeant-major, 171
- ——, James, corporal, 278, 279;
- sergeant-major, 296, 297, 416–419
- ——, Thomas, corporal, 451
- Ford, Lieutenant, 107;
- Captain, 137, 157
- ——, Charles, corporal, 204
- Foremen of works, 294
- Forrest, William, corporal, 478
- Fortifications, Duke of Richmond’s plan for the, 55–57
- Fortune, sergeant-major, 117
- Frame, William, private, 438
- France, 237–242, 243, 245–247, 249–252
- Francia, Antonio, corporal, 21
- ——, Francis, consul at San Roque, 21
- Fraser, John, 21
- ——, Peter, corporal, 5
- ——, quartermaster-sergeant, 379
- ——, Samuel, private, 185
- Frederic fort, Holland, 217
- French, Henry, Mr., 294
- Fyers, William, Colonel, 132
- ——, T., Captain, 157;
- Colonel, 171, 288
-
- Galloway, quartermaster, 210, 296
- Garrison duty, corps excused from, 41, 68
- Garnham, Alfred, 448, 449
- Geddes, Hugh, 483
- Genoa, 222, 227
- Gibb, Sub-Lieutenant, 191, 196, 222, 242, 255
- ——, C. J., Lieutenant, 384–388
- Gibraltar, 1–9, 130, 132, 138, 146, 154, 157, 184, 199, 242, 248,
- 254, 258, 279, 291, 292, 403, 427, 435, 446, 470
- ——, siege of, 10–28;
- galleries, 14–16, 25, 29–32;
- St. George’s Hall, 16;
- King’s Bastion, 7, 9;
- model of, 9;
- Orange Bastion, 25;
- anniversary of siege, 42;
- privileges of corps at, 50;
- cave under signal-house at, 51;
- wish of the Jews at, 71;
- companies at, incorporated with the corps, 106;
- naval tank at, 123.
- See also “Gibraltar”
- Gidens, corporal, 298
- Girvan, John, private, 393, 398, 419–421, 423, 439
- Glacière Bastion, Quebec, 275
- Gleig, the Rev. G. R., opinion of corps, 383
- Glenie, Lieutenant, 57, 63
- Glenmorgan schooner, 325
- Gold Coast, 267
- Goldfinch, Captain, 195;
- Major, 201
- Gordon, Captain, (Malta) 127
- ——, Alexander, Captain, 427
- ——, James, private (Viscount Kenmure) 256
- Gorman, James, corporal, 214
- Gosport, 65, 73, 132, 157, 184
- Gosset, Lieutenant, 424
- Gossett, Lieutenant, 222;
- Major, 243
- Gottenburg, 166
- Gozo, 155
- Graham, Andrew, private, 250
- Gratton, Sub-Lieutenant, 195, 196, 200, 202, 216, 231, 241
- Gravatt, Lieutenant, 101, 107
- Gravesend, 95, 114
- Gray, sergeant-major, 132
- Green Island, 196
- Green, Sir William, 2, 4, 72
- Greenhill, corporal, 300, 301
- Gregory, Lieutenant, 269
- Greig, John, private, 364
- Grenada, 82
- Grewer, Thomas, private, 195
- Grey, Captain, 310–321, 328–340
- Grierson, Captain, 285, 288
- Grigor, sergeant, 19
- Guadeloupe, 92–93, 175, 227
- Guernsey, 65, 73, 132, 157, 184, 248
-
- Hague, Thomas, private, 36
- ——, Samuel, private, 107
- Haig, sergeant-major, 98, 132
- Halifax, N.S., 104, 127, 132, 157, 167, 169, 184, 227, 279, 291,
- 292
- Hall, Benjamin, private, 176
- ——, John, sergeant, 259
- Hambly, Roger, private, 104
- Hamilton, Dougal, private, 104
- ——, Lieutenant, 99
- Hanover, 152
- Harding, G. J., Lieutenant, 162;
- Captain, 177, 239
- Hardinge, Sir Henry, 275, 286
- Hare, Joseph, sergeant, 277
- Harnett, corporal, 483
- Harper, Captain, 258
- Harrenden, Thomas, 21
- Harris, Joseph, sergeant, 284
- ——, David, the diver, 350, 351, 353, 358–361, 373–377, 393, 396,
- 419, 421, 434, 440, 441
- ——, John A., private, 442
- Harrison, John, corporal, 21
- Harry, William, private, 192
- Hawkins, Charles, corporal, 444
- Hay, Lieutenant, 21;
- Captain, 102;
- Colonel, 123
- ——, corporal, 211
- ——, Lord John, 354
- Hayter, Captain, 157
- ——, Lieutenant, 252
- Hearnden, sergeant, 357, 388, 390, 391, 413, 414, 434, 446
- Hearts o' pipe-clay, 69
- Hegarty, James, 360, 361
- Hemming, sergeant, 362, 431, 433
- Henderson, Captain, 207, 291, 293, 301, 308, 323, 362, 431
- ——, E. Y. W., Lieutenant, 465
- Herkes, John, private, 283
- Hewitt, James, E. I. C. Sappers, 394, 396
- Hibling, corporal, 426
- Hicks, James, private, 204
- Hill, Lord, 289, 292, 308
- Hilton, James, quartermaster, 152, 234, 296, 445
- Hobbs, Lieutenant, 169, 175;
- Captain, 175
- Hoey, sergeant-major, 90, 132
- Hogan, Patrick S., 445, 476
- Holland, 83, 85, 88, 94, 123, 216–222, 228–231
- ——, Charles, 445, 476
- Holloway, Captain, 77, 95, 112, 117, 180, 192;
- Major, 121, 128, 132;
- Sir Charles, 143, 157
- ——, Colonel, 254
- Hong Kong, see “China”
- Hopkins, John, corporal, 293, 343;
- clerk of works, 295
- Horn, George, 94, 95
- Horses in France, &c., care of by the sappers, 239
- Howatson, private, 387
- Howell, Thomas, private, 86
- Howorth, Captain, 444, 458
- Hudson’s Bay, 460–464
- Hughes, Thomas, private, 177
- Humfrey, Captain, 132, 157
- Hunter, Robert, sergeant, 227
- Hurricane at Barbadoes, 283
- Hurst Castle, 96, 167
- Hutchinson, Lieutenant G. R., 362, 372, 392, 415, 419
- ——, corporal Robert, 117
- Hutton, William, corporal, 111
- Hythe, 164, 177, 185, 327
-
- Ince, Henry, sergeant, 5;
- sergeant-major, 14–16, 18, 25, 30–32
- Inglis, John, private, 147
- Inspections, 221, 249, 255, 256, 274, 289, 292, 308, 324, 343, 368,
- 428, 435, 442, 446, 470
- Ionian Islands, 171, 185
- Ireland, Joseph, private, 359, 360
- Irun, 205
- Irvine, Alexander, private, 457
- Ischia, 171
- Isle of Wight, 167, 177
- Italy, 216, 222, 227
- Itzassu, bridge over the Nive at, 211
-
- Jackson, Thomas, sergeant, 19, 26
- Jaffa, 128, 132, 133
- Jago, James, private, 373, 393, 396
- ——, William, 295
- James, Thomas, corporal, 247
- Jamieson, Alexander, corporal, 207
- Jebb, Captain, 283, 309
- Jenkin, Lieutenant, 426
- Jersey, 65, 73, 132, 149, 157, 184
- Jervois, Lieutenant, 484
- Jesse, Lieutenant, 483
- Jews' wish, 71
- Johnson, Lieutenant, 13, 21;
- Captain, 95
- ——, John, Ensign, 85
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 202, 226, 231, 235, 241
- Johnston, Colonel, 157, 175, 248
- Jones, Harry D., Lieutenant, 181, 194;
- Captain, 205, 226, 240, 246, 247
- ——, Jenkin, sergeant-major, 152, 266, 325–327, 348–353, 372, 399,
- 416
- ——, Rice, Captain, 189;
- Brigade-Major, 210;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 282
- Jones, Richard P., 359, 373–377, 393–398, 419–423, 436–439
- ——, Sir John Thomas, 161, 173, 382
- Junk-ship night, 42
-
- Kaffir war, 254, 293, 454–459, 484
- Keane, Lieutenant the Hon. H. F., 460
- Kenmure, Viscount, 256
- Kennett, Captain, 153
- Kent, Duke of, 32, 42, 104, 138
- Kerr, James, corporal, 91
- ——, Ninian, corporal, 127
- Kerstiman, Lieutenant, 50
- Keville, Edward, corporal, 407
- Kinnaird, Hugh, corporal, 117
- Knapp, Sub-Lieutenant, 231
- Koehler, Brigadier-General, 121, 128
-
- Labourers, 45, 66, 106
- La Caille’s arc of the meridian, 362, 431–433
- Lacy, Captain, 122, 128, 134
- Landmann, Captain, 157, 165
- Lanyon, Hugh, 309, 310, 402, 425
- Laredo, fort of, 211
- Lawford, James, private, 148
- Lawson, Lieutenant, 93
- ——, Andrew, 259
- Lefance, Captain, 4
- Lefebure, Lieutenant, 107, 108;
- Captain, 152, 154;
- Major, 176
- Leghorn, 222
- Letts, Thomas, private, 172
- Levick, sergeant, 117
- Lewis, G. G., Captain, 203;
- Colonel, 484
- Lewisham, 173
- Lewsey, private, 122, 134
- Liddle, William, private, 18
- Lindsay, Andrew, private, 94
- ——, George, sergeant, 423, 435, 440
- Lisle, Peter, _alias_ Mourad Reis, 19
- Lomas, Edward, private, 220
- London, Tower of, 77
- Logan, Henry, corporal, 204
- Lonergan, corporal, 452
- Longitudes, 257, 424
- Lough Foyle Base, 273
- Low Countries. See “Holland”
- Lucca, 222
- Lushington, Lieutenant, 310–321
- Luttrell, Captain, 13, 28
-
- Macauley, Captain, 278
- Maclean, Major-General, 343
- Mackelcan, Colonel, 132, 157
- Mackenzie, Sub-Lieutenant, 158, 199
- ——, Richard, sergeant, 209
- Maclear, Mr., Astronomer-Royal, 362, 431
- Macleod, Lieutenant, 154
- Macpherson, Thomas R., 462, 463
- McAlpine, private, 373
- McArthur, John, sergeant, 132
- McBeath, corporal, 111
- McCarthy, James, private, 210
- McDonald, Archibald, private, 299
- ——, Dr., 293
- ——, Edward, sergeant, 5, 18
- ——, Findlay, corporal, 204
- ——, John, private, 103
- McFadden, John, private, 424, 425
- McFarlane, Donald, private, 438
- McGregor, William, corporal, 347
- McGuckin, sergeant, 450
- McKay, James, private, 219;
- quartermaster-sergeant, 345
- ——, John, sergeant, 180
- McKeer, John, private, 219
- McKerlie, Captain, 480
- McKerras, Lieutenant, 21;
- Captain, 103, 110;
- Major, 136
- McKnight, John, private, 214
- McLaughlin, Hugh, 104
- McLaren, James, sergeant, 283
- McLean, Sub-Lieutenant, 237, 241
- McLeod, Alexander M., sergeant, 484
- McNaughton, John, 36
- McQueen, John, corporal, 347, 357, 378
- Madeira, 164, 185
- Madrid, 194
- Maerk, bridge over the, 217
- Mahomed Sidi, Sultan of Morocco, 6
- Mahmoud II., 304
- Maida, 154
- Maine, expedition to State of, 224
- ——, disputed territory in the State of. See “America”
- Makin, sergeant-major, 20, 132
- Malta, 127, 155
- Maltese military artificers, 155, 170, 171, 227, 228;
- sappers, 243
- Manchester, Duke of, speech against formation of corps, 61
- Mann Gother, Captain, 83, 95
- March, Samuel, sergeant, 373
- Markey, Nicholas, 294
- Marques, Antonio, 35
- Marseilles, 228
- Martinique, 91, 169, 227
- Matson, Lieutenant, 195, 200, 201, 203;
- Captain, 283;
- Major, 371
- Maule, Captain (Lord Panmure), 276
- Mauritius, 287, 291–293, 362
- Maxwell, Joseph, private, 409
- Mayhead, Abraham, 92
- Mealey, John, corporal, 459
- Melhuish, Lieutenant, 180;
- Captain, 276
- Melville, Ninian, sergeant, 213
- Mercer, Colonel, 73;
- Major-General, 112, 132
- ——, Cavalie, Captain, 255
- Mercury, brig, wreck of the, 46
- Messina, 152, 162, 170, 222
- Meyers, Joseph, 358
- Michael, Grand Duke, 428
- Milan, 228
- Milburn, Thomas, sergeant, 218
- Millar, John, private, 172
- ——, Jonathan, private, 204
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 215, 216
- Miller, sergeant, 190
- ——, Robert, corporal, 192
- Militia-men, 151
- Milman, Samuel, private, 127
- Milne, Alexander, private, 250
- ——, Peter, private, 204
- Minorca, 119, 132
- Missouri, steamer, burning of, 427
- Mitchell, George, private, 145;
- sergeant, 169
- ——, Henry, corporal, 326
- Models, 9, 35–38, 254
- Moffatt, William, private, 370
- Moggeridge, Lieutenant, 442
- Moir, James, sergeant, 111
- Moncrief, Colonel, 65, 73, 78, 83, 86
- Montebello, Marquis Di, daughter of, 68
- Montgomery, Walter, 47
- Montmartre, domiciliary visit to, 240
- Monument to Wolfe, 272
- Moody, Governor, 388–391, 412–415, 434, 446
- ——, H. C. B., Captain, 461, 463
- Moore, John, corporal, 364
- Morocco, Sultan of, 7
- Morris, James, private, 204
- ——, John, sergeant, 93
- Morrison, John, corporal, 21
- Morse, Colonel, 65, 73
- Morshead, Captain, 164
- Mortality, 82, 93, 103, 109, 118, 119, 127, 133, 146, 173, 199,
- 255, 256, 279, 292, 367, 426
- Morton, David, private, 94
- Motto of corps, 292
- Mudge, Colonel, 347
- Muir, Andrew, corporal, 284
- Mulcaster, F. G., Colonel, 65, 73
- ——, F. W., Lieutenant, 105;
- Sir Frederick, 292
- Mulligan, sergeant, 448, 454
- Munro, Hugh, 295
- ——, James, private, 219
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 185
- Murphy, John, private, 442
- ——, Lieutenant, 298
- Mustard, Robert, private, 311, 313, 314, 319, 320, 328
- Mutinies, 110, 112, 114, 138
- Mutiny Act, corps first included in the, 61
- Myers, Samuel, private, 87
-
- Nancarrow, John, private, 119
- Napier, James, private, 201
- Naples, 152, 171, 227
- Natal, 384–388
- Needham, Samuel, private, 213
- Negroes, enlistment of, 110
- Nepean, Captain, 87;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 132
- Netherlands. See “Holland”
- ——, engineer establishment in the, 236, 237, 239
- New Brunswick, 185
- Newell, Robert, corporal, 20
- Newfoundland, 163, 166, 174, 184
- New Holland, 310–321, 328–340
- Newman, George, corporal, 407
- New Orleans, 223
- New Zealand, 480
- Niblock, corporal, 204
- Nicolay, Sir William, 293
- Nicolls, Captain, 224
- Nieuport, 86
- Niger expedition, 368, 371, 403
- Nive, 206, 207
- Nivelle, 206
- Northfleet, 114, 177
- North Pole expedition, 481–483
- Nova Scotia. See “Halifax.”
- Nowlan, John, private, 206
-
- O’Connell, Daniel, M.P., 472
- O’Hara, General, 36, 50
- O’Kean, Patrick, private, 250
- Oldfield, Lieutenant, 99, 166;
- Captain, 221, 229;
- Major, 235, 250;
- Colonel, 402
- Olivenza, 178
- Oporto, 170
- Origin of corps, 1
- Orthes, 213
- Ostend, 118
- Oswego, 222
- Owen, Lieutenant, 457, 458
-
- Page, Lieutenant, 283
- Painter, William, corporal, 184
- Palermo, 222, 228
- Palmer, sergeant-major, 132
- Pampeluna, 201
- Parsons, Adam, private, 28
- ——, Joseph, private, 33
- Pasley, Major, 187, 188;
- Lieut.-colonel, 255, 261, 264, 266;
- Colonel, 303, 325, 348–353, 358–362, 372, 380;
- Major-General, 392, 419–424, 435
- Patterson, John, private, 47
- ——, John, private, 457
- ——, Philip, private, 122
- Patton, Captain, 179
- Paul, Thomas, 167
- Pay, regimental, 3, 64, 113, 156, 157, 228
- ——, working, 3, 64, 159, 267, 345, 356
- Payne, Captain, 227
- Pembroke, 480
- Pendennis Castle, 288, 290
- Penhorwood, private, 204
- Penman, William, private, 393, 398
- Penton, Robert, private, 424, 425, 462–464
- Perdita, removal of, by divers, 393
- Perexil, 167
- Peronne, 237
- Philipville, 239
- Phillpotts, Lieutenant, 199, 222;
- Major, 324;
- Colonel, 480
- Phipps, John, Captain, 4;
- Colonel, 65, 161
- Phipps, W. G., Lieutenant, 72
- Picurina, fort, 192
- Pilkington, Lieutenant-Colonel, 173;
- Major-General, 290
- Piper, Lieutenant, 205
- Pipon, Lieutenant, 355, 415;
- Captain, 449, 450, 465
- Pisa, 222
- Pitts, Captain, 206
- Plattsburg, 222
- Plymouth, 65, 73, 132, 157, 184, 254, 258, 272, 289
- ——, riot at, 73–76
- Pollock, David, sergeant, 135
- Pontoneers, sappers recognized as, 231
- Pontoon train, 236, 237
- Pontoons, 261, 266, 278, 289, 303, 343, 416, 418
- Porchester, Lord, speech of, against formation of corps, 62
- Porto Rico, 107
- Portsmouth, 65, 73, 99, 132, 157, 184, 254, 290, 292, 484
- Powis, sergeant, 203
- Power, Patrick, corporal, 214
- Pratts, Simon, 28
- Precedence of corps, 65
- Pringle, Captain, 50
- Privileges of corps, 50
- Procida, 171
- Prussian tactics, 78
- Puntal, fort of, 211
- Puntales, 176
- Purcell, John, sergeant, 230
- Purfleet, 291
- Pyrenees, 201, 205
-
- Quebec, 272, 275, 291, 292
- Queue, the, 167
-
- Rabling, private, 370
- Rae, John, corporal, 373, 377, 393, 398, 415, 420, 424, 440, 459
- Rawdon, Lord, 63
- Read, sergeant-major, 353, 360
- Reductions, 228, 243, 247, 253, 287, 290, 306, 356, 382, 403
- Reed, John, sergeant, 287, 288
- Reid, Lieutenant, 194;
- Captain, 243;
- Major, 264, 265, 284;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 441
- ——, William, private, 350, 353
- Reis, Mourad (Peter Lisle), 19
- Relief works, Ireland, 471–476
- Repeal, 425
- Reynolds, William, private, 293, 362
- Richardson, Sir John, 481–483
- ——, William, corporal, 304, 390
- Richmond, Duke of, 20, 55–63, 67
- Richmond, John, sergeant, 6, 28
- ——, Thomas, Lieutenant, 33–36
- Rideau canal, 272, 285–287
- Riot at Plymouth, 73–76
- Ritchley, William, corporal, 293
- Roberts, Benjamin, corporal, 117
- ——, Evan, private, 120, 127;
- sergeant, 162, 170
- ——, Lieutenant, 324, 402
- Robinson, Lieutenant, 323, 343;
- Captain, 415, 449, 451;
- Major, 465, 466
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 171
- ——, William, corporal, 109
- Rock, Daniel, 295, 448
- Rocroy, 239
- Rogers, Lieutenant, 248
- ——, William, private, 109
- ——, William, sergeant, 179
- Roliça, 166
- Roncesvalles, stockades at, 201
- Rooney, corporal, 192
- Ross, Lieutenant, 85;
- Captain, 163, 178
- ——, John, sergeant, 326
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 231
- Round Down cliff at Dover, 415
- Rowley, Lieutenant, 98;
- Major, 161
- Royal Engineers to command the corps, 3, 65
- —— George, 348–353, 358–362, 372–378, 392–399, 419–424, 435–440
- —— Military Artificers, formation of, 58–63, 64
- —— staff corps, 124, 327
- Rutherford, Lieutenant, 255
-
- St. Domingo, 101, 103, 110, 119
- — Helena, 242, 254, 257
- — Julian, 180
- — Lucia, 92, 102, 142, 248, 255
- — Marcou, 104, 133
- Salamanca, 194
- Sanders, C. K., Lieutenant, 232
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 221, 231
- Sandham, Captain, 309, 348, 371
- Sandhurst, 279, 309, 343, 357, 379
- San Sebastian, 202–205, 303
- Santa Maura, 177
- Santona, 210
- Sappers recognized as pontoneers, 231
- Sapping and mining, instructions in, 187
- Sargent, William, 295
- Savage, Captain, 272;
- Colonel, 463
- Savona, 222
- Scoble, James, private, 250
- Schools, 221, 245
- Scrafield, Henry, corporal, 223
- Scylla castle, 154
- Second-corporals introduced, 158
- Seine, bridges over the, 238
- Serrada bridge, 194
- Servants, 173
- Sevenoaks, 121
- Seville, 195
- Shambrook, Charles, private, 284
- Sharp, Adam, private, 28
- Sheerness, 261, 444
- Shepherd, Robert, 28
- ——, George, sergeant, 442
- Sheridan, Mr., 58–59, 63
- Sherriff, sergeant, 46
- Shetland islands, 483
- Shipley, Major, 107;
- Colonel, 132, 142, 144;
- Brigadier-General, 169
- Shipwrecks, 46, 76, 209, 269, 288, 299
- Shirres, sergeant-major, 35, 120, 132, 139
- Shornmead, 96
- Shorter, quartermaster-sergeant, 261
- Shot and shell boys, 33–36
- Sicily, 154, 162, 167, 185
- Sierra Leone, 267
- Sim, sergeant, 274, 297, 298
- Simpson, William, private, 91
- Sinclair, David, private, 108
- ——, Sir John, 189
- Sirrige, Hugh, corporal, 20
- Sirrell, Thomas, corporal, 270
- Skelton, John, private, 351–353;
- corporal, 359, 373, 375–377, 440
- Skene, Lieutenant, 256
- Skinner, Ensign, 6;
- Lieutenant, 13, 50
- Lieutenant-colonel, 157
- ——, W. C., Captain, 50
- Slieve-snacht, 268
- Smart, Lieutenant, 50
- ——, John, private, 94
- Smith, Alexander, private, 269
- ——, Captain C. F., 181;
- Sir Charles F., 244, 363
- ——, Captain J. C., 153
- ——, Captain W. D., 222, 255, 256
- ——, Edward, sergeant, 86
- ——, Frederick, Mr., 328, 331, 335, 339
- ——, Hugh, corporal, 365, 479
- ——, James, sergeant, 19
- ——, James, sergeant-major, 132
- ——, James, private, 479
- ——, John, sergeant-major, 171
- ——, John, corporal, 260;
- sergeant, 276, 277
- ——, Joseph, sergeant, 445
- ——, Sir Frederic, 441
- ——, Thomas, private, 398, 415
- Smyth, J. C., Captain, 166;
- Colonel, 234, 235, 236;
- Sir James, 245, 248, 249, 274
- ——, Captain R. N., 19
- Southampton, 94, 391, 411, 470, 476
- Spain, 302, 306–308, 321–323, 341, 354
- Spalding, Robert, 407
- Sparks, Sub-Lieutenant, 231
- Spence, sergeant-major, 68, 132
- Spencer, B. Keen, corporal, 425
- Spike island, 143, 157, 184, 248
- Spry, Colonel, 65, 73
- ——, William, 294, 304
- Squire, Captain, 162, 166, 171, 178
- Stack, William, corporal, 192
- Staff corps. See “Royal Staff Corps”
- Stanway, Lieutenant, 178, 192;
- Captain, 205;
- Major, 281, 283
- Stapleton, Lieutenant, 60th rifles, 32
- State, assistance to the, 117
- Stephens, Thomas, corporal, 173;
- sergeant, 213
- Stephenson, Sub-Lieutenant, 199
- Stephens, Sub-Lieutenant, 218, 241
- Stewart, Alexander, private, 94
- ——, Lieutenant, 103
- Sticklen, private, E. I. Co., 438
- Stokes, Lieutenant, 455, 457, 484
- Storie, John, private, 181
- Stratton, Sub-Lieutenant, 202, 206, 207, 213, 216, 231, 237
- Streatfeild, Captain, 259
- Sub-Lieutenants, 158, 160, 185, 228, 247
- Sullivan, private, E. I. Co., 442
- Surinam, 119, 144
- Survey, 264–265, 265–266, 273, 291, 293, 301, 308, 323, 342, 343,
- 344, 348, 355, 362, 403–411, 415, 445, 447, 465–469, 476, 480
- Sutherland, Captain, 83
- Symon, Charles, private, 359
- Symonds, Lieutenant, 349, 350, 353, 358, 361, 364, 365
- Syria, 363–368
-
- Tabb, corporal, 28
- Talavera, 170
- Tarifa, 177, 181
- Tarragona, 181, 193, 196
- Tay steamer at Bermuda, 440
- Taylor, Hugh, sergeant, 103
- ——, Thomas, private, 128
- Teaff, Stephen, private, 204
- Thackeray, Major, 196
- Thomas, George, private, 169
- ——, Lady, 338
- Tholen, 217
- Thompson, Alexander, Captain, 238
- ——, James, 272
- ——, W., Corporal, 393, 398
- Thomson, Daniel, 47
- ——, R., Lieutenant, 169;
- Captain, 216, 221
- Tibbs, Richard, private, 386, 387
- Tides, observation of the, 391
- Tilbury Fort, 96, 114
- “Times, The,” testimony to the corps of, 481
- Tobago, 143, 255
- Torres Vedras, 175, 178
- Toro, 201;
- bridge of, 201
- Torrince, Robert, private, 92
- Tournai, 222
- Toulon, 86, 93
- Toulouse, 213
- Tower of London, 77, 283-285
- Townshend, Lieutenant and Adjutant, 275
- Transfers from the Line, 151
- —— to the Artillery, 105
- Trevail, Philip, private, 421, 438
- Trevethick, William, private, 82
- Trinidad, 107, 255
- Tucker, Captain, 445
- Turkey, 121-123, 128, 133-138, 303
- Turner, Samuel, private, 379, 414
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 195, 196, 201, 202, 204, 231, 232
- Tuscany, 222
- Twiss, Major-General, 149
- Tylden, Major, 236, 244
-
- Ustaritz, 206
-
- Valenciennes, 83, 243, 246
- Valentia, longitude of, 424
- Vance, John, private, 457
- Vera, 206
- Vetch, Captain, 460
- Vicars, Lieutenant, 265, 302, 306, 307, 322, 323, 354
- Victor, Captain, 272, 286
- Victoria, Her Majesty the Queen, 470
- Vimiera, 166
- Vincent, George, corporal, 476
- Vittoria, 201
- Vivian, Sir Hussey, 294, 308
-
- Waddell, David, private, 122, 134
- Wagg, Thomas, private, 92
- Wakeham, Robert, sergeant, 111
- Walcheren, 171
- Wall, John, 481
- Wallace, John, private, 141
- ——, Sub-Lieutenant, 191, 193, 196, 200, 202, 213, 216, 242
- Walpole, Captain, 484
- Walsh, Peter, private, 204
- Ward, Captain, 91st regiment, 458
- War of the Revolution, 81
- Warren, John, private, 257
- Washington, 233
- Waterdown camp, 84
- Waterproof composition, 349
- Waterloo, 232-236
- Watson, Edward, sergeant, 117, 121, 123, 128, 132, 135
- ——, John, 77
- Watts, corporal, 413
- Webb, Lieutenant, 403;
- Captain, 483
- Webster, Anthony, private, 171
- Weir, James, private, 148
- Welbank, Captain, 399
- Wells, Captain, 210
- ——, corporal, 111
- West, Edward, private, 473
- —— Indies. See different stations
- —— ——, companies formed for service in, 88
- West, John, sergeant, 404
- ——, Lieutenant, 206
- Westo, John, private, 119
- Whitaker, Samuel, private, 28
- White, James, corporal, 267
- ——, Captain, royal staff corps, 278
- Whitmore, Captain, 149;
- Lieutenant-Colonel, 256
- ——, George, Lieutenant, 260
- Wild, Thomas, private, 172
- Wilson, John, private, 86
- ——, Sir Robert, 427, 435, 446, 470
- ——, William, corporal, 175
- “Williams” brig, 325
- ——, John, Lieutenant, 285
- ——, John, private, 373, 378, 393, 397
- ——, M., Captain, 348, 349
- Williamson, Alexander, private, 94
- Winchelsea, 480
- Windham’s Act, 156
- Windsor, 445, 459
- ——, George, private, 472
- Winter, George, private, 107
- Wolfe, monument to, 272
- Women, proportion permitted to embark with their husbands, 45
- Wood, John, 294, 442
- Woodhead, sergeant, 20, 123
- Woolwich, 65, 73, 99, 112, 114, 132, 149, 157, 184, 248, 254, 291,
- 292
- Wright, P., Lieutenant, 178, 193, 201
- Wynne, Captain, 471
-
- Yarmouth, 96
- Yates, private, 415
- Yecla bridge, 194
- Yezeed Mulai, Sultan of Morocco, 6
- Yolland, Captain, 476
- Yorke, Lieutenant, 392
- Young, David, sergeant, 5, 18
- ——, James, sergeant, 326, 385-388
- ——, John, corporal, 117
- ——, sergeant, 276
- ——, William, quartermaster, 266
- Ypres, 228, 230
- Yule, Captain, 325
- Yusuf Sidi, Bashaw of Tripoli, 19
-
- Zamoro, 201
- Zante, 171
- Zetland, 483
-
- END OF VOL. I.
-
- LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET.
-
- Footnotes
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-Hyphens appearing in compound words on a line or page break are
-retained or removed based on the preponderance of instances of the
-word elsewhere in the text.
-
-On occasion, tabular data which spanned pages repeated some
-headings. These repetitive lines are moot in this format, and have
-been removed.
-
-On p. 231, the footnote number, now n222, was missing from the note,
-and has been restored.
-
-There is a minor inconsistency in placing a space before the
-abbreviation ‘lbs.’ In the several places that the space lacking,
-one has been added.
-
-The list of Illustrations and the text refer to Plates XVI. and
-XVII., which will appear in the 2nd volume of this work.
-
-Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected,
-and are noted here. The corrections below refer to page and line in
-the original printed text. The prefix ‘n’ refers to the note number
-as it is numbered in this text.
-
- 4.17 artificers were, with few exceptions[,] Added.
- dismissed;
-
- 43.3 Recruiting[,] reinforcements Removed.
-
- 135.22 on board the ‘Ajax’[:/,] Replaced.
-
- 137.19 in the [dgerms] which contained the field a large
- equipment high-pooped
- Nile boat
-
- 159.3 reached the sum of 45,500_l_[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 179.10 present at the second s[ei/ie]ge of that Transposed.
- fortress
-
- n203.1 Jones’s ‘Sieges,[’] ii., p. 107, 2nd edit. Added.
-
- 215.13 commanding them in divi[vis/si]ons Replaced.
-
- 227.14 on his way from Sandwich to Michili[ Replaced.
- M/m]achinac
-
- 235.1 to recommend the officers [u/a]nd men Replaced.
-
- 247.38 embraced th[e] abolition of the rank Restored.
-
- n274.1 ‘Graham’s Town Journal,[’] Added.
-
- n284.14 He became forema[d/n] of works in November, Replaced
- 1844
-
- 303.28 the summer of every year had been [past] _sic_
-
- 308.7 would have thrown th[o/e]m wholly into the Replaced.
- hands
-
- 332.27 sixty lbs. of tolerably good flour.[”] Added.
-
- 337.32 a piece of torn and shred[d]ed blanket Inserted.
-
- 369.34 to allow two persons to pass each other[.] Added.
-
- 372.29 and the detachment retur[n]ed again to Inserted.
- Chatham.
-
- 397.31 b[l]ood was flowing profusely Inserted.
-
- 402.22 could they have done so.[”] Added.
-
- 445.12 So exquisit[i]ely was the work performed Removed.
-
- n484.1 ‘Practical Operations for a Siege[”/’] Replaced.
-
- 467.14 checking the same simultaneo[n/u]sly Replaced.
-
- n504.1 Debates in the ‘Times,’ March 6, 1[48/84]7 Transposed.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the Royal Sappers and
-Miners, Volume 1 (of 2), by T. W. J. Connolly
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE ROYAL SAPPERS, VOL 1 ***
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